MAORI WHALEBONE CLUB, NEW ZEALAND
Prospective purchasers are advised that several co… 顯示更多
MAORI WHALEBONE CLUB, NEW ZEALAND

KOTIATE

細節
MAORI WHALEBONE CLUB, NEW ZEALAND
KOTIATE
Length: 12¼ in. (31 cm.)
來源
Ernst Beyeler, Basel, Switzerland, before 1990
注意事項
Prospective purchasers are advised that several countries prohibit the importation of property containing materials from endangered species, including but not limited to coral, ivory and tortoiseshell. Accordingly, prospective purchasers should familiarize themselves with relevant customs regulations prior to bidding if they intend to import this lot into another country.

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拍品專文

Circa 19th century
Reserved for chiefs and high status warriors, this superb Maori hand club is made out of whalebone (Physeter catadon), and carved with a large lobed blade and a straight handle decorated with the head of a tiki. A wrist-thong was previously hung from the pierced hole at the bottom of the handle in order to make sure the warrior didn't lose his weapon during combat. The Beyeler Kotiate is the work of a sculptor who played with the volumes of the club: the thickness of the median part slowly decreases until the very end of the ridges where they become extremely thin. He skillfully carved this club in the form of a highly stylized anthropomorphic body. The long cylindrical neck is supporting a beautiful tiki head looking towards the sky. The protruding tongue of the tiki refers to a traditional aggressive gesture closely linked to combat.
We can compare this exquisite Maori hand club to a second one from the British Museum (Oc1895,-.366) that was collected by Frederick H. Meinertzhagen (1845-1895) circa 1870 on the East coast of New Zealand, and to another one from the Sainsbury Collection previously owned by the Pitt-Rivers Museum (Hooper, 1997, fig.8).

更多來自 非洲、大洋洲及美洲藝術 (包括Ernst Beyeler家族珍藏)

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