this resource - The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts
Transcription
this resource - The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts
Inter retations Approaches to Art Objects Selected from the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts Edited by Les Tickle and Veronica Sekules Visual Arts Education -~~ Sedgwick Sedgwick provides risk consultancy, insurance broking, employee benefits consultancy and financial services from more than 260 offices in 60 countries. Sedgwick gives high priority to supporting educational initiatives within its community programmes. Sedgwick is an award winner under the Business Sponsorship Incentive Scheme for its support of The Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education, UEA. ©The Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education, School of Education, University of East Anglia, 1995. AU rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means: electronic, mechanicat photocopying, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the editors. ISBN 0 904 510 425 ii Acknowledgements Interpretations, created by the Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education in association with the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the University of East Anglia, is a sequel to the volume Starting Points. Both volumes have been produced initially to provide help for primary school teachers sponsored by Sedgwick's Norwich Office to follow a course of study in the visual arts. The materials have also been used as learning resources by a much wider audience. We are grateful to Debbie Hilton, Public Relations Manager of Sedgwick's Norwich Office for her continued support and encouragement. Our thanks are due also to many people - staff, guides, Friends of the SCVA, and teachers, who commented favourably about the first volume and encouraged us to extend the materials for their use too. This volume has been produced with funding support from the Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education, the trustees of the Sainsbury Endowment Fund, and Sedgwick, and would not have been possible without the generosity of these bodies. It has been prepared by a research team; Heron Dickson, Alan Kitchell, Will Rea, Veronica Sekules and Les Tickle, working from the Sainsbury Centre, The Sainsbury Research Unit, The School of World Art Studies and Museology, and the School of Education, at UEA. We have been supported in many and diverse ways by the staff in all these places, in carrying out the research and in the production of the book. Our thanks go to everyone who has helped to make the results possible. Photographs of art objects are by James Austin MA FBIPP. Line drawings and sketch maps are by Les Tickle. Typesetting and design by Miriam McGregor. Printing by Asgard Printing Services, Lowestoft. iii Preface This volume is intended to provide an introduction to more of the educational possibilities of the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection. (Some are introduced in Starting Points: Approaches to Art Objects from the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Sekules and Tickle 1993). The aim is to stimulate a process of enquiry and response to art objects in the Collection, as a basis for developing an understanding of art. The book is intended for all those people who are interested in teaching about art and learning about art. These might include teachers of art or other humanities subjects; parents who want to familiarise themselves with the Collection and work on interpretations with their own children; and students or other visitors to the Gallery who want introductory guidance to parts of the Collection. It is based on our experience of teaching about objects from various periods and cultures across the world, available in the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection. iv Contents Page The Sainsbury Collection 1 The Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education 2 Developing Responses to Art Objects 3 The Culture of The Cyclades 17 Carved Figures From The Cyclades 25 Arts of Africa 41 Some African Objects 59 A Solomon Islands Figure 78 Eastern Solomons Body Ornaments 102 Ten Modern European Portraits 122 v The Sainsbury Collection The Sainsbury Collection was given to the University in 1973 by Sir Robert and Lady Sainsbury, who began acquiring works of art during the 1930s. It is internationally renowned for its holdings of art from all over the world, from 4,000 BC to the present day. It includes the indigenous arts of Western and Central Africa, Australia, New Zealand and many islands of Oceania; art and artefacts made by the Aztec and Maya Indians of Ancient America as well as more recent objects by Canadian Indians of the Northwest coast and the Inuit peoples of the arctic regions; Indonesia, China, Japan, India and other parts of Asia, antiquities from ancient Egypt, Western Asia and Europe. Among the modern western artists, Henry Moore, Alberto Giacometti and Francis Bacon are particularly well represented. There are also major works by Degas, Picasso, Modigliani and Soutine as well as contemporary European sculpture and paintings by John Davies, AnthonyGreen, Yuri Kuper, Antonio Saura, Manolo Millares, Charles Maussion and Boris Zaborov. The Sainsbury Centre, designed by Foster Associates and opened in 1978, is one of the most distinctive postwar British buildings. Its superstructure forms a vast boxlike canopy made of steel, aluminium and glass, lined on the interior walls with louvred blinds. Maintenance services are discreetly hidden between its inner and outer skin. The great open space of the interior is divided by low screens and mezzanine floors to provide galleries for the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection, other art collections and temporary exhibitions, teaching rooms, offices, libraries and study areas for undergraduate and postgraduate teaching departments; the School of World Art Studies and Museology and the Sainsbury Research Unit for the Arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas. Beyond the reception area for gallery visitors, huge evergreen Ficus Benjamina trees overhang the coffee-bar. There is also a public restaurant at the west end. The Crescent Wing, opened in 1991, includes a new gallery I conference space, a 'visible store' for the Sainsbury Collection open to the public during gallery hours, teaching and office accommodation, and conservation and technical workshops. 1 he Centre for plied Research in Visual Arts Educa ti on The University of East Anglia, Norwich, was established in 1965, As well as having extensive and wide-ranging programmes of research and teaching which are internationally and nationally renowned, the University has a commitment to serving the region of East Anglia, Among its many specialist interests in research, scholarship and teaching, the presence on the campus of the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection, housed in the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, provides a focus for many activities related to visual arts education, The School of Education at UEA has an established reputation for research, scholarship and teaching in the fields of curriculum innovation, educational evaluation, professional learning, and the development of teaching, These interests span compulsory and post-compulsory schooling, and teaching and learning in a range of professional contexts, The Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education, based in the School of Education at the University, was established in 1991 in order to increase liaison between the various disciplines already involved in the field of visual arts and education, The Centre brings together the perspectives of artists, art historians, educators, and other professionals, as contributors to the development of knowledge and understanding of the arts, The aims of the Centre are to research ways in which interpretation, knowledge and understanding of the visual arts may be promoted and developed through the use of experimental approaches to teaching about the visual arts from diverse social and cultural contexts, and to disseminate research and innovative practices through training programmes for art educators, 2 Developing esponses to Art Objects Les Tickle and Veronica Sekules If one wants to enhance an individual's understanding (of art), the most likely route is to involve her deeply over a significant period of time with the symbolic realm in question, to encourage her to interact regularly with individuals who are somewhat (rather than greatly) more sophisticated than she is, and to give her ample opportunity to reflect on her own emerging understanding of the domain. (Gardner 1990 page 17) Our aim is to acknowledge the importance of the learner who is working constructively and actively on the growth of their own knowledge. The desire for knowledge might grow from the immediate aesthetic stimulus provided by artefacts. A process of reflecting on one's own response to them is an important next step. Puzzling around the evidence of what the works represent; how they were inade; from what? when? where? by who? for whom? why? and so on, can set a framework for more detailed investigations. Responses, reflections, questions, and puzzles provide a basis for understanding particular art objects and the work of particular artists. They can lead to a further stage: a search for possible relationships (similarities and differences) between different objects or classes of objects, or between the work of different artists. Developing an appreciation of the ways in which classifications and connections can be made, we suggest, is one of the basic tools for understanding art. Approaches to understanding objects in the Collection in terms of similarities, differences, and relationships necessitates fitting them into a context of other objects and artists from elsewhere. Knowing their places of origin, and the social and cultural circumstances in which the objects were produced and in which the artists worked is part of that process. This should not detract from the more immediate aesthetic experience and personal interpretation and response to individual art objects. Rather, we believe it should complement that experience. We have considered some of the art objects (and their makers) which are included in this volume in these ways - focusing on Cycladic, African and Solomon Islands objects. We have sought to extend the kind of information available about particular 3 objects by inviting specialists from various disciplines (aesthetics; anthropology; archaeology; and art history) to write about them and about the artists who produced them, and/ or about the social and cultural contexts in which they were produced. However, these cases are dealt with in ways which illustrate the processes of coming to know and understand - the investigative nature of the experts' work; the speculative approaches to evidence; continuing mysteries left for them and us to ponder; and sometimes the accumulation ofinformation into more or less dependable bodies of knowledge. For other objects we have not gone that far. By recording a small amount of information about individual examples of European portraiture we have provided the beginning of some basic questions which arise when face-to-face with objects. We have left it to readers to bring to these objects, if they wish, the approaches which are exemplified in the more detailed sections. This is a deliberate approach, intended to encourage readers independently to construct their own ideas, thoughts, and sources of information around these objects as a way of developing the attitudes, skills, and qualities of approach which are illustrated elsewhere. The choice of portraits by contemporary western artists is also intended to provoke comparison with the kinds of questions, responses, and information which arise from looking at the other kinds of objects included in the book. Beginning from what we know In providing the information, in both the brief and the more detailed sections, we have kept in mind the problems of trying to focus attention on some of the questions from which an understanding of art objects can begin. In particular we want to acknowledge the problem that in deciding to look at an object, the observer will bring to it a particular attitude of mind- about themselves as novices or connoisseurs; a set of perceptions - about the particular works of art or even about art in general; or preconceptions - for example about subject matter, use of colour, or modes of representation. All kinds of social and cultural factors may play a part in the processes of interpretation and understanding - for example, experience of the natural light in an environment might affect a response to the representation oflight in a picture; exposure to religious images might add a particular dimension to the interpretation of symbols; or capacities to interpret facial or other physical gestures used within the family, or in whole societies, might affect responses to figurative art. 4 No-one really knows how these cultural factors may influence response, taste, judgement, or understanding, or even if it is possible to generalise about whether the influences would be the same among individuals or across groups of people. What we suggest is that levels of understanding of art achieved by individuals are likely to be built within their own terms of reference, which will be influenced by their cultural experience. However, individuals and social groups are no longer self contained, and terms of reference are rapidly becoming influenced by considerations of others' viewpoints - in gender, race, cultural group, etc. Awareness of the possible implications of cultural, temporal and historical variables is important. The viewer might begin the process towards understanding with knowledge about how their culture, personal preferences, skills, age and so forth are likely to guide their approach, so that expectations about the level of communication are rooted in their self-awareness about their own experience. Receptiveness to stimuli from the work of art, a sensitivity towards looking and researching inquisitively, is essential for approaching the next set of experiences. From then the inquiry can be a process of exchange between the viewer and the work of art which enhances the experience of the viewer so that understanding and expertise can grow. The sequence is: SELF-AWARENESS; OPENNESS /RECEPTIVENESS; RESPONSIVENESS; FURTHER ENQUIRY; NEW SELF-AWARENESS. Directed interests There may be particular interests brought to the encounter with art. The ways in which a sculptor approaches work in the Collection might be with an appreciation of the way other artists have treated form, or have modelled specific materials. A painter might be interested in the devices used in composing pictures, the creation of illusions of space on a canvas, the representation of light, or the juxtaposition of certain colour combinations. Those approaching from the perspectives and attitudes of other disciplines, such as art history, anthropology, aesthetics, art criticism, religious studies, materials science, or conservation will perhaps know and want to know other kinds of things. They will seek their knowledge using the skills developed within their discipline. An art historian can be especially interested in tracking patterns of patronage or of stylistic 5 influences, Someone interested in religious studies might be concerned with the sacredness of objects or the representations of deities and power of symbols, The more general and broad-ranging approach to developing understanding beginning from what we know - is likely to be adopted by visitors to the Collection, especially by teachers and young children, Initial contact with the objects will be affected by previous experiences and personal interests, There will be some preconceptions about what can be gained from the works of art and some directing of interests, The non-expert might not want or need to construct their knowledge in the same way as experts do, They might want freely to roam around the range of questions we began to pose in Starting Points, which are extended here, as well as posing their own, So individual interests and perceptions will direct the viewer in certain ways, But we want to encourage receptiveness to the range of possible interpretations of the evidence available from the objects and surrounding information, This kind of flexible foraging for understanding might be particularly important for people working with young children, whose categorizations of knowledge can be considered more fluid, perhaps, than those which pertain in academe, They will however probably be directed by levels of experience and range of interests, and will need to be encouraged in their responsiveness and enquiries towards new levels of appreciation, awareness and understanding, The style and content we have adopted, though, is self-consciously for adults and older students rather than directly for a young audience, The material is intended as a resource which can be used in whatever ways are appropriate by particular readers, or in the case of teachers, for their particular pupils, Specialist interests We have kept an open mind about whether someone encountering the Collection might prefer to develop an approach based on one or more of the specialist disciplines which have contributed to the writing of Interpretations, These include: aesthetics- opening up conversations and reflections about visual appearances and the making of judgements about art; developing a language which allows oral and tactile experiences,: discourse as well as direct making art - concerned to know about artists have used materials and solved 6 problems of visual communication, to convey meaning or represent experiences; art history- knowing about the relationships between works of art (individual works of one artist, styles and movements); the lives of artists, and the social/ cultural contexts of art production; and the extent to which aspects of history can be illuminated by the study of objects; anthropology-with its interests in peoples and their way of life, customs, beliefs, and social organization; criticism - developing an attitude through discourse, judgements across different works of art, or between different movements, trends, or time spans. We have tried to maintain openness and flexibility in terms of the particular interests and approaches adopted, at the same time as including ideas from specialists in particular disciplines. Some examples of how novices tackled initial encounters with unfamiliar objects have been woven into the chapters to illustrate the approaches which we are exploring. The content of each section has been written from the point of view of the individual author without restriction to any single one of the specialist interests - i.e. art production; aesthetic response; art history, etc. It is left to the reader, if they choose, to think of particular parts of the content of each of the sections in these categories, or to select information based on any of the questions posed within the chapters. We believe that by leaving these choices readers will be able to decide for themselves how best to guide their own interests and growing understanding, as well as that of particular children who are being guided by parents or teachers. Understanding different aspects of the art objects themselves can be accompanied by an appreciation of the different ways of developing knowledge of art, and the specialist perspectives from which it can be approached. One set of assumptions that we have adopted is that these developments will be best served through sensitive uses of curiosity, attention to emerging confidence in articulating ideas about art, and a capacity to handle intangible dimensions of knowledge. It is now widely accepted that such an induction into knowledge of the arts will not occur unaided or untutored (Gardner 1990; Hargreaves 1983; Taylor 1992). Some have argued that the development of understanding is gradually 7 cumulative, likely to be a long-term process, and will need to be based on the persistent application of learning procedures and self-reflection about both the subject matter and the learning process. Interpretations is intended to be a resource for self-tutoring as well as for use in interactive teaching. Diversity The number, variety of types, and range of origins of objects in the Sainsbury Collection is very apparent to the visitor. The question of what to choose to look at first and where to begin to study is one which often arises. For us as editors, the question of what to acquaint the reader (or their students or children) with or guide them towards is the equivalent. How to extend (beyond Starting Points) awareness of the diversity, at the same time as helping to deepen methods of critical response and analysis, is the problem we have tackled in the choices of the sections. The objects chosen for inclusion are intended to extend the appreciation of diversity of the Collection in terms of types of art, subject matter and materials. We have also sought to extend our attention to the scope of types of art, peoples and places in ways which emphasise the idea of entering into realms of diversity in the social, cultural, environmental and geographical sense. The objects chosen for each detailed section are representative of very specific types of art from particular times and places - Cycladic sculptures; Benin bronzes; African masks; a canoe figurehead and body ornaments from the Solomon Islands; portraits from contemporary Europe. They offer a basis for comparison and understanding of the issue of diversity and differences. As well as noticing difference (or, rather than emphasising difference) we have also tried to remain conscious of the question of similarity - not of the appearance of the objects, but of some of the answers to the questions which help us to respond to them and understand them. This too is self-conscious, for it permits us to start thinking about themes of subject matter, of uses of art objects, or of belief systems from which they are manifestations. For example, in considering what objects represent, there are themes in the use of images to convey the presence of deities; in the portrayal of known individuals; and in relationships between people and animals, birds and fish in nature and mythology. In considering how subjects are represented, the use of stylization is a characteristic principle shared by different art forms. The search for similarities in artistic purposes, or in principles of design, or concern 8 with subject matter, can be adopted to try to balance what we see as a prevailing tendency (it is evident in national curriculum documents, and in the way this volume is organized) to seek out distinctiveness and difference, especially between racial and cultural groups and periods of time. As well as asking how styles and traditions (and related social and cultural contexts) change across time and place, we also want to pose the question of what ways art might provide evidence of common human purposes, intentions, values, and responses to the world. The problem of maintaining this attitude of searching for what is similar will be evident as the following sections are read. In each case the types of objects on which we focus, their locations of origin, and sources of information about them, are rightly regarded as distinctive. That distinctiveness is inherent in their appearance, size, type of materiat subject matter, and so on. It is often in the background information - that which is not necessarily available to us from viewing the objects themselves that we need to search for evidence of artistic intention and common human purpose. Cultural visions The islands of the Cyclades in the Aegean Sea, and the figures which were made there in pre-Classical times, provide an entry to the ancient world in the lands in and surrounding the Eastern Mediterranean. Two approaches have been taken to these figures. One written by an art historian sets out to explore how examples of this art in the Collection can be used for acquiring basic methods of analysing objects. The other, written by a scientist who became passionately interested in the region, introduces approaches to understanding their geographical and cultural contexts, based on information, evidence, and interpretations provided by experts who have studied other similar objects and their ongms. The ancient arts of bronze casting in Benin, and carving among the Yoruba, both in Nigeria, are introduced as part of a chapter which considers the complexity of the arts of Africa. These are followed by descriptions of the importance of the masquerade, and the place of the arts within masquerade activities. Masks and other ceremonial and domestic objects of the Asante, Dan, Yombe, and Kuba people of Africa, are then considered through detailed observation and background research of the places, people, and cultures. These African objects are from a period about which we know, from historical 9 sources, something of social, cultural and commercial contacts between groups. Like the Cycladic figures they are considered through approaches to the individual objects as found within the Collection -i.e. by dose observation of whatis immediately available to us. The observations are also set within a context of story, myth, social organization, patronage and the rules of artistic production within the particular communities from which the objects originate. The interpretive world of the anthropologist is engaged, as a prelude to the realm of possibilities which exist, for the reader who wants to take further the study of African art. Some Solomon Islands objects in the Collection are considered initially for the impressions which they created for a group of viewers, and the tangible evidence which they offer. Isolation from their original context (and from other related objects), their small size, and a sense of unfamiliarity about their purpose, material production and place of origin, provided the initial stimulus for the approach to them. (This sense of strangeness will be protected for the time being so that the reader can approach them in the same way). The immediate sense impressions and interpretations are added to by providing information from anthropological sources which can extend and deepen responses to them and an understanding of them. They indicate something of the social and artistic diversity within the Solomon Islands. Within the Melanesian Islands of the Western Pacific and more broadly within Oceania - i.e. incorporating Polynesia and Micronesia - diversity is a characteristic of the arts. The selection of the Solomons objects is intended to open the way to further study of the arts of this large, diverse reg10n. Portraits The Sainsbury Collection contains many and varied examples of portraiture, in many forms, made from a wide range of materials, and from various geographical and cultural origins. We have selected ten, each made in Europe in the late nineteenth or twentieth centuries, by known individual artists. The section is intended to provide a contrast to the other chapters of the book, both in the objects chosen and the way they are presented to readers. They have been presented as pairs, in a way which raises some interesting questions about the particular portrayals, the subjects, and the artists' intentions. Pairing them in this way is, of course, simply a device for gaining an initial focus of attention and stimulating discussion. A brief general introduction accompanies the selection, and 10 a minimal amount of information is associated with each pair. Presuming that they will be broadly familiar with the culture that produced those images, readers are invited to stand before the portraits in the gallery, to explore these brief beginnings of interpretations, and to go beyond them by raising their own questions, and seeking further possible realms of interpretation for themselves. The immediate encounters with the portraits are intended to extend an invitation to explore the work, life, ideas, and methods of particular artists responsible for each of the images, and the social context :in which they were working. Initially, though, it is the invitation to the immediate encounter which we want to encourage. This should stimulate the process of reflecting not just upon the object, but also on what it is that the viewer depends upon within their own ideas and experiences when that process begins. It will also help potentially to form an appreciation of how that experience changes through the encounter, from sharing thoughts with others, and by making comparisons between objects, artists, and the contexts in which art is made. With these portraits the reader is invited to engage again in the direct experiences and personal interpretations, and begin the processes of self-awareness; receptiveness; responsiveness; and further enquiry. The school curriculum Because parts of the book are likely to be used by teachers, perhaps by parents of school children, or by older pupils themselves, the approaches outlined so far were written with the Art National Curriculum for England in mind. This is compulsory for pupils in Key Stages One to Three, up to age fourteen. The art curriculum contains a dual emphasis on the study of art and the making of art. The requirement to make connections between those two aspects of art education is explicit: pupils' understanding and enjoyment of art, craft and design should be developed through activities that bring together requirements from both Investigating and Making and Knowledge and Understanding, wherever possible. (Department for Education 1995.) The ways in which connections between the two are to be made, and how the context of their own work is to be related to others' artwork, remains to be explored through the ingenuity of teachers, parents, and children. This is not a straightforward matter. It is an issue for artists themselves, as they work within the traditions of a particular genre of art, whilst also developing personal and creative means of expression. It is a complex matter for all artists, but is particularly complicated for those who are interested in the very varied range of types of art and 11 modes of representation which are now available to us in galleries, museums, and the media. We believe that creative and imaginative handling of the possibilities implied by these requirements will be needed to avoid mimicry. The potential for casual, unsustained and superficial attention to objects is very apparent. It will be important to ensure that pupils' work utilizes their contact with art objects as inspiration, stimulus and resource in ways which are relevant and meaningful to them in the context of their own lives. It will be important that pupils' experiences surround their understanding and also extend it in depth. We have left to teachers and parents the task of deciding how to explore with their pupils ways to use contact with art and artists for the purposes of making their own work. That aspect of curriculum practice, we believe, deserves separate attention from the focus of Interpretations. In this volume we have maintained a focus on the development of knowledge and understanding of art, artists and artistic traditions from a variety of cultural contexts, through contact with original works of art. Key Stage One Children in key stage one (5- 7 year olds) are expected to be able to identify examples of art and recognise how colour, shape, line, tone, form, space, texture, and pattern are used in images and artefacts. To achieve this, their lessons are to include introductions to the works of art in their locality, both contemporary work and that from a variety of periods and cultures. They will be expected to recognise differences and similarities in works of art from different times and places, be able to describe them and their responses to them, and explain what they think and feel about them. Key Stage Two Key stage two children (7 - 11 year olds) are expected to maintain and deepen their knowledge of art available to them in the locality by being able to identify the materials and methods used by artists. How images and objects are created through the use of the visual elements (line, tone, colour, etc.) for different purposes is intended to add to the depth of understanding. Their appreciation of cultural diversity is expected to be broadened through further 12 attention to the work of artists, and children will be expected to recognise ways in which works of art, craft and design reflect the times and places in which they were made. That appreciation is to include the capacity to compare the ideas, methods and approaches to representation and expression used in different styles and traditions. Personal responses are to include the expression of opinion and ideas about their own work and that of others, using their knowledge through an associated, specialist, arts vocabulary. Key Stage Three The development of knowledge and understanding at these key stages, and of the skills of responding (to benefit the utilization of such knowledge in producing the pupils' own work) will be built upon in key stage three (11 - 14 year olds). Their lessons are to include sustained attention to works of art from a range of artistic traditions from a variety of times and places. It is expected that students will continue to analyse the distinctive characteristics of art forms, craft, and design, and be able to relate them to their sociat historical and cultural contexts. A capacity to identify some of the visual codes and artistic conventions used in different styles and traditions of art is expected to result from such study. They will also be expected to be able to understand changes in styles and traditions, recognising contributions of particular artists, craftspeople and designers to such changes. In the development of responsiveness and evaluative skills students will be expected to justify their own preferences for and expressions about works of art. In the_making of their own art they will learn to assess the influence of other art and artists on it. 13 Further reading Department for Education, 1995 Art in the National Curriculum, London, H.M.S.O. Gardner, H. 1990 Art Education and Human Development, Los Angeles, The Getty Center for Education in The Arts. Hargreaves, D. 1983 'The Teaching of Art and the Art of Teaching' in Hammersley, M. and Hargreaves, A. (Eds) Curriculum Practice, Lewes, Palmer Press. Sekules, V. and Tickle, L (Eds) 1993 Starting Points: Approaches to Art Objects Selected from the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, VEA, Norwich, Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education. Taylor, R. 1992 Visual Arts in Education, London, Palmer Press. 14 ANATOLIA GREECE TURKEY 0 Ephesus MEDITERRANEAN SEA 100km The Aegean Region 15 Kea D v Syros f) Seriphos ~nos c(J CJ ~~ Paros Z!Jnuparos0 0 ~ "'1.sP"l:l L~;:J ~ (jQ J7 °' '0 D Amorgos Thera !~ D~ SO km The Cyclades Islands 16 The Culture of The Cyclades Alan Kitchell Location also the centres of some of the earliest known manifestations of the culture that blossomed throughout the Cyclades in the early bronze age i.e. in the years 3200 to 2000 BC Travel guides tell us that the Cyclades Islands of the central Aegean Sea are the realm of the footloose back-packing young ferry travellers, and go on to enthuse about their beauty-sea and sky as blue as they are in the brochures; the sugar-cube villages as white. They are right, of course, but it is not the attrac tion of the islands as holiday resorts that merits attention here. It is, rather, the Origins The islands of the Cyclades are small. Naxos, the largest, is less than 32 kilo metres (20 miles) long. With the excep tion of the volcanic islands of Melos and Thera (Santorini) most are practically made of marble. Marble provided the raw material from which were made the pots and sculpted figures that charac terize unmistakably this early Cycladic culture, and whichColinRenfrew(1991) very specialculture that developed there more than five thousand years ago. It was only in more recent times, about 500 BC that the ancient Greeks gave the islands the name Kyklades (Cyclades). They did so because they :imagined them as being scattered in a circle (kyklos) around Delos, the holy island and sanc tuary of their great god Apollo. Stand ing on Delos now, the cyclical distribu tion of the islands of Mykonos to the east, Tenos to the north, Syros to the considers to be one of the glories of prehistoric art. The figures in particular are simple but :intriguing. They range from nearly life size to miniatures. They are usually female with arms folded across the chest below the breasts. The head is tilted back and flattened. Most of them appear to be standing on tiptoe. The only immediately noticeable facial features are the characteristically elon gated nose and, sometimes, ears. Most of the figures wear nothing, hold no thing, and give no clues to us today as to why they were made or who or what they may have represented. west and Paros and Naxos to the south is striking. None the less, the geogra phical centre of the thirty or so islands is actually nearer Paros, which has be come the hub of the extensive present day ferry services that link the islands with each other and with mainland Greece. Paros and nearby Naxos were 17 Sfanding female idol Neolithic (late 4th Millennium BC) Marble h. 13.5 cm UEA346 18 Life ancient and modern Products of early cultures, such as these marble figures, are particularly difficult to interpret because, being prehistoric, there is by definition no written record to help. Systematic archaeological in vestigation can unravel some of the As Lesley Fitton (1989) has argued, the effort of trying to see the islands as these early inhabitants saw them in the third millennium BC is worth making. Geog raphy and the natural environment can not of themselves explain how or why a society flourished in past times. How ever, they are basic to our experience of the world in which we live, and in which mysteries of the dista~.t past. Before such work began in the Cyclades, investiga tions elsewhere had established that at the beginning of the third millennium BC, when the neolithic period was draw ing to its close, life throughout the is lands and lands adjacent to the Aegean Sea was based on settled farming, fish ing and hunting, and the crafts of pot tery, weaving and woodwork, the last by means of stone tools. In less than a thousand years, before the end of the millennium, the first civilization to de velop in southern Europe saw its flow ering in Crete, which lies only 112 kilo metres (70 miles) away from the southernmost islands of the Cyclades. other peoples lived, because of the ines capable effects of the forces of nature, provision of resources, and potential for contact. These are windy islands. It is said that on Mykos the wind is sufficiently strong to drive windmills for 300 days in the year. From spring to autumn a north erly wind - the meltini - blows reliably southwards across the Aegean Sea. It has even been suggested that without this wind Greek civilization and culture might never have arisen, because it greatly assisted sea travel. The Aegean area has been described as the cradle of European civilization. The development of metallurgy con tributed significantly to this rapid progress towards civilization. The tech nology of smelting metal ores and mak ing alloys, and the skills of casting and forging metals, produced better weap ons, tools and domestic vessels. The Bronze Age had arrived and metal tools facilitated the work of craftsmen, espe cially the boat-builders and sculptors of Crete and the Cyclades. This may ac count in part for the superior quality of the marble figurines produced in this The islands were effectively stepping stones linking east and west, north and south, from the plains of Anatolia (Tur key) to those of the Hellenic peninsula, and from the Danube basin to Crete and the south Mediterranean coast. In the Cyclades skills in boat-building, sea manship and navigation facilitated mari time trade and cultural exchanges throughout the islands and mainland period, called Early Cycladic II. 19 shores of the Aegean Sea and the coloni Farming and fishing sation of adjacent islands. Evidence from archaeological finds of food residues and tools indicates that There is no clear evidence that sail was agriculture and animal husbandry have used until towards the end of the early changed little. Islanders are still preoc Bronze Age, about 2000 BC The early cupied with self-sufficiency. The main Cycladic mariners used longboats em crops were, and remain, barley (today, ployingup to forty voyagers. It has been on Naxos, a short-strawed variety), estimated that with a crew of twenty olives (which also provided oil fuel for five, such boats would be capable of lamps) and grapes. On Thera (Santorini) voyages of two weeks duration, giving the fertile volcanic soil is terraced and a range of about 320 kilometres (200 the stems of the vines are trained into a miles). basket-like whor1so that the plant stands no higher than about 75 centimetres (30 Landscape inches) when they produce their fruit. The islands are small and rocky, their Both are measures to ameliorate the rav cliffs often falling sheer to the sea. In fact ages of the ever present wind. they are the peaks of a submerged moun tain landmass. They are pounded by the Sheep, goats, pigs and, where the ter sea and lashed by storms in winter, and rain permits, cattle, are raised as they baked by the sun in summer. The result were in prehistoric times. It is not cer is a harsh, stony landscape supporting tain that the donkey, much in evidence aromatic scrub and punctuated with today, had yet made its appearance in outcrops of marble. The views are open the Cyclades during the Bronze Age. and often dramatic. Oxen were possibly the draught ani mals then. Probably covered by trees in the Bronze Age, most of the islands have been de The sea yielded tunny, which pass forested by the combined appetites of through the waters around the islands boat-builders and goats. Tamarisks still seasonally, and octopus, as well as shell line the shores and cypresses are planted, fish. Game was probably hunted too. their dark green colour and upright habit Much of the time of the early inhabit contrasting with the silver-leaved olive ants must have been given to the pro trees that have been cultivated since the duction of food and other maintenance beginning of the third millennium BC tasks related to it. 20 Buildings grinding. Pumice, used for fine polish Shelter had to be provided against the storms in winter and the sun in sum mer. Stone seems to have been the pre ing1 came from Thera (Santorini). ferred building material but few settlement sites have been excavated, especially those of early date. From later sites there is evidence of buildings with both rectilinear and curvilinear walls made of flattish stones bonded with clay and rendered inside with a mixture of day and straw. Doors were of wood and roofs consisted of wooden beams supporting reeds plastered with day. Their remains have been interpreted as The exact sources of metals are not known but it has been established that copper came from Kythnos and because arsenical bronze was widely produced it is assumed that ores containing arsenic were available from one of the volcanic islands, Melos or Thera. Lead and some silver was mined on Siphnos but there was no tin and, apparently, no indicating flat, sloping, pitched and vaulted forms of roofing. Vaulted roofs withstand earth tremors best and are as only a single bead has been found, in the preferred form today on the vol canic islands. Also, houses are still built In recent times a novice craftswoman (Oustenoff 1984) has sculpted Cycladic into the soft volcanic rock, providing coolness in summer and shelter in figures from local marble using only tools of emery and obsidian, and winter. polishing with pumice. ANeolithic-type violin idol 7.5 cm (3 inches) high took Rocks and minerals her five hours to make. An EC II-type canonical figure (see below) 17.5 cm (7 inches) high occupied her for sixty hours. gold at that time in the Cyclades. Nor was gold from elsewhere used, it seems, a tomb on Naxos. Just as the soil on most islands is not particularly fertile, so are other natural resources limited. There is of course marble in abundance on most islands, though that from Faros and Naxos is of especially fine quality. It is now trucked out daily in huge blocks from quarries in central Naxos. On Melos there is ob sidian which, like flint, can be chipped to give a sharp and hard edge for use as Though she acknowledged that a bronze chisel would have been advantageous, she is not convinced that they were necessarily used in the early Bronze Age except, perhaps, for the few examples of more complex figures depicted playing musical instruments. Metal tools would certainly have saved time but, as she tools. Naxos has emery which in Neolithic times was used both for heavy tools such as hammers or axes and for remarks, a few hours of time may not have been a consideration for craftsmen working in the third millennium BC. 21 Violin Idol Eastern Medite:ranean, Cycladic Islands (Ios) Eady Cydadk I (3200-2700 BC) Mairble h. 25.2 cm UEA350 22 Settlements survived into EC HI and then In the period from 3200 BC, especially as the products of metal technology began to displace those of wood, bone and stone, there was a steady evolution of forms in architecture, domestic equip ment such as lamps, vessels and pestles, and craft tools, as well as in the art works themselves. Archaeologists rec disappeared. Excavations The first systematic excavations in the Cyclades were made on Antiparos in 1883 and 1884 by an English traveller, James T. Bent. His findings from about forty graves constitute the core of the British Museum's collection. The next substantial investigation was made five ognise three phases of this development of Early Cycladic (EC) culture, viz EC I, H, and III, in the period from 3200 to 2000/1800 BC Their research reveals that EC I settlements were established in sheltered coastal locations and were unfortified. Later, in EC II, it seems that invaders threatened these coastal sites so the population moved to the hilltops, building houses closer together, and surrounding them on the lower slopes with defensive ramparts. Finally, the EC III settlements were again built on the coast and were not fortified. years later by the Greek archaeologist Christos Tsountas, who opened up several hundred graves on five other islands. On Syros he made the first excavations of a settlement site. It was he who coined the term Cycladic Civili zation and recognised the folded arm figurines to be "true products of the art and spirit of the islanders". The discovery by Arthur Evans in 1900 of the palace at Knossos in Crete attracted attention away from the Cycladic sites. Because of two world wars archaeological activity did not recommence until the early 1950s. In the decade that followed there was great interest and activity, driven largely by the desires of collectors. They perceived similarities between these 'primitive' Cycladic sculptures and the works of modern artists. Few settlement sites have been investi gated and most of the evidence about life in the Bronze Age comes from the contents of graves - including most of the marble figurines of known prov enance. These are often referred to as idols, and appear to have evolved in EC I from the so-called violin idols and seated 'fat lady' figures of the Neolithic period. The early figures often had very long necks and did not have the arms dearly folded across the chest.Not until the EC II period did the folded arms figurine become the canonical form that Because of the consequent increase in the market value of Cycladic works of art, particularly marble figurines, 23 cemetery sites undisturbed for four millennia were ruthlessly pillaged. They were made useless to archaeologists try ing to reconstruct the history of Cycladic culture and civilization. Also, because there were insufficient genuine pieces to meet demand, forgers were quick to oblige, laying a long false trail for those with an academic interest in EC HI at exactly the same time that the Minoan civilization in nearby Crete began to dominate the region. This was not military domination. On an island 265 km (160 miles) long, the people of Cycladic art. densely populated and wealthy centres made Crete economically powerful and able to trade widely. Crete established great palace territories utilizing skills absorbed from adjacent cultures, including that of the Cyclades. Peaceful interaction between these The past thirty years have seen renewed archaeological activity and scholarly interest in the islands, and steps have been taken to prevent further unlawful interference with their heritage. Unfor tunately for visitors a consequence is that those who are interested cannot In contrast, the islands of the Cyclades were geographically unsuited to co ordinated development. They were small, isolated centres of cultural and trading activities that were no match for the scale of Crete. Localinitiatives which were born within the relative isolation of the islands, and which resulted in advances in seafaring, metallurgy and art, were apparently better exploited elsewhere. now buy maps that show the locations of prehistoric sites. However, during the past decade in particular the results of archaeological studies have been the subject of major exhibitions, symposia and publications. These have greatly extended our know ledge and understanding of the culture of the Cyclades in the early Bronze Age and, in particular, of the marble figurines. Further reading Fitton, J.L. 1989 Cycladic Art, London, British Museum Publications. Oustenoff, E. 1984 The manufacture of Cycladic figurines, in Cycladica, Lon don, British Museum Publications. Demise It is not always easy to deduce from archaeological evidence the reasons for the demise of ancient civilizations and cultures. In the Cyclades the marble Renfrew, C. 1991 The Cycladic Spirit, London, Thames and Hudson. figurines that manifest the blossoming of the culture in EC II disappeared in 24 Female idol with folded arms Eady Cycladic I, precanonical variety (3000-2800 BC) h. 9.4 cm UEA347 25 Carved Figures From The Cyclades Veronica Sekules Inspiring sight has to continue and to develop in depth and complexity. The simple shapes of the Cycladic fig ures and vessels, their confident and assured outlines and the pure white translucence of the marble, give them an air of stillness and mystery which seldom fails to intrigue the spectator. The sense of curiosity is further aroused with the knowledge that these images were made some three to four thousand years ago, and yet to us they appear so modern. For children the figures are appealing because they are so easy to recognise and perhaps because they can identify with the carvers who made shapes not unlike their own first at tempts at rendering the human body. Taste and appreciation Even the initial exercise of appreciation is more complex than we might at first think. The first means of approach to any object is invariably from the per spective of our own time and culture. A number of people who have become specialists in the field of Cycladic art during this century have begun by be ing lured by the stark beauty of the objects. But appreciation of their beauty is relatively recent. In the early 19th century, Cycladic figures were thought crude, grotesque, repulsively ugly1 and the simple forms of the figures attrib uted to the lack of artistic accomplish ment of their barbaric makers. Cycladic art did not really reach the peak of its recognition until the 1950s and 1960s since when it has been sought after by collectors and artists and appreciated for its aesthetic resonance with modern ism. Artists such as Constantin Brancusi, Hans Arp and Hans Coper were influ enced by it. Even if we have no knowl edge of these specific artistic connec tions, we are so attuned to streamlining, Many gallery visitors would stop to wonder and move on. The process of looking is continuous, time is limited and the next object beckons. Is it not enough to know that these white mar ble human figures were made in the Aegean islands of the Cyclades off main~ land Greece, and that the skills to make them existed as long ago as the Bronze Age? But if one is to cross the threshold between appreciating the beauty of these things and understanding them, then the process of engagement with them 26 (1972), the relative autonomy of the to reductionist, modernist design in all aspects of our lives, that we can readily Cycladic islands has been emphasised and the development of culture there during the 3rd millennium BC has been seen as independent from the palace cultures of the mainland and Crete. relate to Cycladic figures and are pre disposed to take them seriously as sophisticated products of a developed culture. Because of this empathy with contemporary taste, many gallery visi tors in our time find that Cycladic art can become a means of forming a bridge between the present and the far distant past, a source of wonder, that perhaps people who lived so long ago were in spirit not so different from us. After more than a century of excavation and scholarship, there are still many mysteries surrounding the subject of the art of the Cyclades. Vital informa tion has come from the context of exca vations, but the important archaeologi cal sites are few in number and many objects have been removed from inad equately excavated sites. There are no documents which might have given us written records to help with interpreta tion. Archaeologists and historians have thus had to be very resourceful in recon structing the original cultural context for the material, by comparison with contemporary cultures, by inference and deduction from the sites themselves and by careful dassificati on of the excavated material. But because of the very partial and damaged nature of the evidence, many questions remain unanswerable and each new excavation has the poten tial to add substantially to existing knowledge. This means that despite the frustrations, the subject is in an exciting stage of continual development. New discoveries are being made all the time. Mysteries and discoveries Serious study began with the increas ingly professional archaeology of the late 19th century and excavations on the islands by James Theodore Bent and Christos Tsountas. Nothing found on the islands compared with the scale and magnificence of Heinrich Schliemann's discoveries in Mycenae and other sites of the Peloponnese in the 1880s, or with Arthur Evans's excavations in 1900 of the palace at Knossos on the island of Crete, which he identified as the palace of King Minos. By the turn of the cen tury the whole subject of Greek Bronze Age culture was dominated by these Mycenean and Minoan civilisations, which allowed a structure for analysis and dating to be refined. More light was thrown on the finds from the Cyclades through comparisons with these greater Dating and better documented centres. Through the more recent interpretations of ar chaeologists, especially Colin Renfrew One of the first and most important tasks in making sense of excavated sites 27 and objects is to establish evidence for tion were uncovered there by the British dating. Further classification can then School at Athens under the direction of assign characteristics of shape, form and Duncan Mackenzie in 1896-9, the latest style to periods in time. For the layer corresponding to the citadel at Cyclades, there are a number of dating Mycenae. Renfrew re-examined all the classification systems in use, the main documentation from the Phylakopi ex one of which ultimately derives from cavation and derived the name for the Arthur Evans's dating of Minoan Crete last early bronze age phase, EC Ht from and divides the whole period into three: the Phylakopi I site. (Renfrew 1972) Early, Middle and Late Bronze Age, each subdivided into three periods. So Style we have Early Cycladic I' or EC I (3200 The folded arm figures of the Cyclades 2700BC), which corresponds broadly are found in greatest numbers dating to Evans' s Early Minoan I; Early from the middle phase of the Early Cycladic II' or EC II (2700-2300BC), Cycladic period, EC II, the Keros Syros which corresponds to Early Minoan II culture. They are known as canonical and Early Cycladic III' or EC HI (2100 figures as they conform to a convention 1800BC), which corresponds to Early and yet produce variations from it. Well Minoan III. documented excavations become type 1 1 sites which are used for dating and The archaeologist Colin Renfrew has classifying similar material from less suggested another terminology for well-documented sources. If they yield similar periods which derives from characteristic figures or vessels then characteristic archaeological sites. The these too are named after the site and earliest phase, corresponding to EC I become type-styles. Thus there is the took its name from early cemetery finds Kapsala variety, the Chalandriani vari at Pelos on the island of Melos and the ety, the Koumasa variety, the Spedos settlement at Grotta on Naxos, so he variety, the Dokathismata variety, each nameditGrotta-Pelos. The middle EC II of which has identifiable characteristics phase, which represents the mature which are useful for classifying other phase during which the characteristic material whose excavated source is un marble figures were made in largest known, or which might have moved numbers, was called Keros-Syros after around the islands to other sites in the the cemetery site of over 600 graves at course of its use. The Sainsbury Collec Chalandriani on Syros and a site on tion has examples of nearly all of these Keros at Dhaskaleio Kavos. Phylakopi styles, but most of the Spedos variety on the island of Melos was a key site which is the most numerous category because three cities in layered stratifica and the most varied. 28 Colin Renfrew has identified character istics of the Spedos variety as follows: in Athens. Over fifty other figures have since been attributed to this master, in cluding a figure in the Sainsbury Collec tion (UEA 342). Stylistic attribution and identification of individual hands is a very interesting phenomenon. If it is skilfully and sensitively done, then it can give structure to a body of material that is otherwise amorphous. It :is an essential classificatory tool and all The figures of the Spedos variety appear thick and well built in profile, and there is much sculpting in the round. The head, seen in profile, is fairly thick, with a vertical surface at the crown. Seen from the front it is sometimes lyre-shaped, broadening mark edly at the crown. The face has a convex surface and the chin is rounded. There is considerable variation in the body, which may be rather straight, although it is more fiexed at the knees. The waist is usually clearly modelled, being narrower at the thighs, and it generally terminates with an incised line at the lower edge. It certainly does not disappear altogether as it does in the Chalandriani variety. The shoulders are of varying width, although not as wide as in the Chalandriani and Dokathismata varie ties, and are sometimes rounded. The upper leg (pelvis to knee) is modelled separately from the calf (knee to ankle) so that the knees are shown by this modelling of the legs. The arms too are generally modelled rather than simply incised or cut. Incisions are not nu merous, and often the pubic triangle is not marked at all. (Renfrew 1991, 86) Attribution Careful analysis of similarity and differ ence between figures can enable attri bution to workshops. One scholar, Pat Getz-Preziosi has identified individual people who work with objects have to learn how to do it. But style is something about which there can be much differ ence of opinion. There are also disagree ments with the principle of identifying 'hands' or 'masters' in that this can give a particularly personality-based, implicitly hierarchical view of artistic creativity which may not actually fit the evidence, especially over such a lengthy period as the span of Early Cycladic civilisation. It is only specialists who need to engage with the full debate on these matters, and they are constantly testing each oth ers' theories and examining the evidence afresh. But the general principles can be explored by the non-specialist. The skiUs of stylistic identification and analysis can be acquired even at quite a rudi mentary level. There are no absolute rights and wrongs and the process of testing theories among the members of . a group can be undertaken as an exer hands, notably the Goulandris Master, who she identified from two figures and a head in the Goulandris Collection cise in testing analytical facility with visual material. 29 Change According to the way in which exca vated material has been dated and cat egorised1 it has become apparent that Cycladic marble figures show a general stylistic development from little fat squat neolithic period figures 1 via interim forms like the long-necked 'violin idol' to the elongated and flattened charac to effect an aesthetic revolution? Can change happen as a result of steady collective development between groups of workshops interacting and copying one another? How is stylistic change affected by other factors such as eco nomics, beliefs, changing patterns of consumption? Although the details of stylistic dating needn't concern the gen eral viewer, the lessons which can be learnt from it can1 and the questions which can be asked as a result of the process which has taken place can stimu late thoughts and discussion about how development and progress is under stood and how certain kinds of history are written. teristic canonical figure. The general development took place over a period of hundreds of years. One can also look at the material in another way, not in terms of gradual development with tran sitions between one style and another1 but in terms of change from one form to another. The distinction between these two approaches is quite important and interesting to explore as it concerns how we interpret the processes of artistic production1 influence and cultural change. Schematic figures in violin form from EC I have been represented as if they evolved stylistically into the ca nonical figure of EC II, but actually they are quite different. How can the change and difference be explained? Did artists copy the forms and gradually refine them over a period of time1 so that one form could change into another? Or was there a sudden change? Did a single influential master in EC II, someone like the Goulandris Master, suddenly change the style to produce the canonical figure which then established the norm? These questions can be asked about any period of art. How do influences work? Does it require a single creative genius Access to evidence One of the great attractions of the study of Cycladic art1the figures in particular, is the potential accessibility of the sub ject to non-specialists. The objects found during excavations in the islands of the Cyclades have given1 and continue to give, primary evidence about the cul ture that produced them. Because infor mation from documentary sources is non-existent, scholars have had to study the objects and their excavation con texts with particular care in order to help them to understand the culture. The subject has been well published, so there are an unusual number of key texts charting the progress of the study of the artefacts and lavishly illustrating them and their geographical and 30 they were discovered and some specu lations about their purpose which have been made in the literature. Of course, archaeological contexts. It is relatively easy to understand and to become really involved in the processes of interpretation and to engage in critical debate about the literature as well as this is necessarily an oversimplification presented here to give enough back ground information to enable objects in the gallery to be used for teaching. about the objects. It is also a very good subject for exploring some of the meth ods by which artefacts from the past are The figures have been identified vari classified and interpreted. ously as: dancers; ancestors; Ushabti figures which in this case were intended specifically to satisfy the sexual needs of the dead; substitute human sacrifice; Detective work The real puzzle is how these figures from the Cyclades can be interpreted. What are they?Whyweretheymade?Theanswers toys for the dead; psychopompoi spirits who guide the souls of the dead are still not known, but many observa tions have been made and theories devel oped by specialists using their common sense, taking into account all the data available to them. But this exercise need not be the exclusive pro-vince of special ists. Many of the theories can be assessed by the general observer also by using common sense and careful observation, establishing a range of possibilities from into the afterlife; nymphs and heroes in a state of ecstasy; household deities and votaries - the larger being deities and the smaller, votaries. The figures have been found to a limited extent in graves. Most numerous in graves from EC II/Keros Syros phase, was pottery, obsidian blades and beads and ornaments. The richest graves con tained a range of all types of finds including jewellery of silver or bronze, toilet articles and weapons. Marble fig visual evidence, from archaeological sources on the islands themselves and from better preserved and documented sites elsewhere. Itis in this kind of exercise and with the analytical techniques that follow, that children can become involved and learn about the processes of classifica tion of visual material and how deduc tions can be made from it. ures are not common overall, although they may occur in large numbers in a single grave - as many as fourteen have been recorded. According to Renfrew, differences in wealth are thus apparent with marble figures appearing among the wealthier graves. One of the wealthi est graves of all at Spedos contained two Clues Summarised below are some of the sali ent facts about the manufacture of the figures and the circumstances in which marble folded arm figures, one of which was 57.5 cm (23 inches) high, three 31 The figures are not exclusively female, though female ones are in the majority. There are also some musician figures marble bowls, a marble lamp, a deco rated pottery lamp, two pottery jugs (one decorated), two pottery cups (one decorated), and two footed pottery jars. Another, at Dokathismata, contained a marble figure, a silver diadem, a deco and seated female figures carved fully in the round. Vessels of various forms in marble and pottery are extremely numerous. rated silver pin, two copper brac~lets, a small sheet silver dish and a pottery jar (Renfrew 1991, 46). Olaf Huckmann on There is insufficient evidence to date the other hand does not associate fig ures only with rich graves, but refers to instances where there is only a single figure in a grave, or in the EC I period where'sculpture is replaceable by beach pebbles'. (Thimme and Getz-Preziosi about the gender of the deceased in relation to the type or number of figures. It appears that there is no particular correlation. Figures are not associated with the graves of children. 1977, 43-44) Some of the figures have traces of paint on their faces and bodies. (There are two examples in the Sainsbury Collection, UEA 347, an EC I figure and UEA 353, an EC I head.) Flat slab markers covered the graves. Earlyonesaresingle,latermultiplegrave structures of several stories are known. The deceased was buried in a crouching position lying on one side, normally on the right side, with knees drawn up to the chest. From Phylakopi I, rock cut tombs are known (Thimme and Getz There is disagreement about whether the figures are meant to stand up or lie down. Some are clearly made to stand, such as the figure groups and some of the Plastiras and Louros figures (Thimme 1977, 44). Renfrew believes that the existence of double figures with Preziosi 1977, 33-36). Figures have also been found in settlements outside of a funerary context. paired in antiquity by means of bored holes for strings to hold them together. Some were buried in fragmentary con dition. Some were too large to fit in the the second figure on the shoulders of the first is a due that they were meant to represent standing figures. Thimme infers from the positions of the feet and legs of the majority of figures, that they were made to recline and that they were meant to lie on supports, or with marble cylinder neck rests (Thimme and Getz Preziosi 1977, 45-46). Fitton believes that grave chamber. the majority were designed to lie down Marble figures vary in size. Most are under 60 cm, but some are almost life size. There are dear indications in the graves that many were broken and re 32 What are they made of? How are they made? Are they complete? and that their posture evokes funerary associations (Fitton 1989, 40). Looking at the figures The most obvious initial questions about Cycladic figures, arising from the most basiccuriosityaboutthem,suchas 'what are they for?', 'who made them?' 'who In order to continue to tackle the big question, reference will need to be made to the literature (or initially to the sum maries here). do they represent?' open up vast and daunting areas of inquiry which only a specialist could address in full success fully. But it is possible to develop a methodology for carefully constructed enquiry at a pace compatible with More detailed questions in front of the objects could be asked with the aim of sharpening observation skills. Similari ties and differences between objects can be noted in order to glean more infor mation about their relationships to each other. It is by this means that objects can be sorted into groups, like with like. One can get some measure of the range of variations of types. Questions may be addressed by taking the objects system atically one by one and feature by feature, such as: different levels of non-specialist knowledge of the subject. One means of enquiry which we can explore is the development of a technique for asking small questions, answerable from readily available sources, while keeping the big questions always in mind. Are all the heads the same shape? How may the shapes be described? How many different types of head are there? What features do they have? What features might they originallyhavehad? What happens at the back of the head? How is hair indicated, if at all? If for example the big question is 'Who do they represent?', a sequence of simple questions could be asked in the gallery with the objects aimed at stimulating basic observation of details, each answer bringing the viewer a little closer to being able to tackle anew the bigger question, such as: This kind of analysis, if it is done systematically, enables sorting and classifying of the data. It could form the basis for description and is a necessary What gender are they? What are they doing? Are they standing, sitting lying down? Are they in movement or still? What sizes are they? preliminary for a catalogue or for stylis tic comparison across different types of related material. 33 It can be important to trace the indi Further reading vidual observations which have led to Doumas, C. 1979 Cycladic Art, Ancient an assumption being made. For exam Sculpture and Ceramics of the Aegean from the N.P. Goulandris Collection, Washing ton DC, National Gallery of Art. ple, in answer to the question, What 1 gender are the figures?', a summary glance could provide a ready answer 'female', but close observation follow Fitton, J.L. 1989 Cycladic Art, London, British Museum Publications. ing another question 'Why do you say that?' 1 or 'What allows you to make that assumption?' could reveal details such Renfrew, C. 1972 The Emergence of Civi as that almost all the figures have breasts, lisation, The Cyclades and the Aegean in the Third Millennium BC, London, Methuen. but that they vary in prominence, some times the figures have a pubic triangle but not always, occasionally they have a Renfrew, C. 1991 The Cycladic Spirit, prominent stomach, so they are likely to be female but with considerable varia Masterpieces from the Nicholas P. Goulandris Collection, London, Thames and Huston. tions. Closer observations may provide crucial evidence for interpretation either of meaning or of style or distribu tion of styles. In fact the assumption is Thimme, and Getz-Preziosi, P. 1977 Art and Culture of the Cyclades in the third Millennium BC, Karlsruhe, University of Chicago. often made, especially by children, that the figures are male, but it would depend very much on the age of the children how far one could go in analys ing this aspect of the figures without a group collapsing in giggles. Questions may continue until the fig ures have been described and analysed in such a way as to stimulate further speculations about their appearance and their interpretation and meaning. If a group interacts well during these kinds of questioning exercises with objects, they can gain a sense of collective achievement from building up an increasingly complex understanding of the objects and J. their potential interpretation. 34 A HancHist of Cydadk Figures in the CoHection UEA N~ DATE STYLE Whole figures 346 Neolithic late 4th millennium BC 350 EC I Violin 3200-2700 BC 347 EC I (?) variety 3000-2800 BC 341 EC I 3000-2000 BC 340 EC II Spedos variety 2700-2500 BC 339 EC II Early Spedos variety 2700-2500 BC 344 EC II Early Spedos variety 2700-2500 BC 343 EC II Spedos variety c2500 BC 345 EC II late Spedos variety 2500-2300 BC 358 EC 11-111 Koumasa variety 2400-2000 BC Part figu1res 348 EC II Spedos variety 2700-2500 BC 349 EC II Spedos variety 2500-2400 BC 668 EC II Dokathismata variety 2500-2300 BC 410 EC II Spedos variety legs c2500 BC 342 EC II Spedos variety (attrib. Goulandis master) c2500 BC Head~ 355 EC I 3000-2800 BC 353 EC I 2900-2700 BC 354 EC II 2700-2500 BC 35 Head of idol Eady Cycladic I, p:recanonical variety (2900-2700 BC) h. 4.4 cm UEA353 36 Female idol with folded arms Eady Cydadic II, Spedos Variety (2700-2500 BC) h. 22.0 cm UEA339 37 Female idol with folded arms Early Cycladic U, Spedos Variety (2700-2500 BO h. 21.6 cm UEA340 38 Fat or pregnant idol wHh folded arms Eady Cycladic II, Spedos Variety (2700-2500 BC) h, 15.8 cm UEA344 39 Idol with folded arms Early Cycladic H~UI, Koumasa Variety (2400-2000 BC) h.12.0 cm UEA358 40 Arts of Africa Will Rea MEDITERRANEAN SEA EGYPT SAHARA ·NIGERIA TANZANIA ATLANTIC OCEAN ZIMBABWE INDIAN OCEAN Africa - outline sketchmap 41 Complexity in African art However, this conception of art does not necessarily mean that art in Africa is African art presents the student with a number of difficult and sometimes con purely functional, that it only has some 'use' value. It's use in many different and diverse contexts need not hide a tentious questions, and it is well to be aware of them before proceeding. In particular, the size and diversity of Africa precludes loose generalisation about its art. The variance in ecological and cultural patterns across the Conti nent is extreme, and the art of Africa varies accordingly. critical separation of the well made piece from the badly executed, a distinction made within most African societies. If we only see African art in terms of its function, whether that function is for ritual, warfare or for cooking a meal, then we lose sight of the fact that art in Africa is as much a vehicle for contem plation as any art work that we place in a gallery. The arts of Africa may include a number of different objects that would not nec essarily be considered as fine art in the West. In many societies there is no for mally defined philosophical concept of art as it is often defined in the West. A simple definition of what African art is could therefore include any object pro duced in Africa that has elaboration The variety of social, religious, political and economic situations in which art is found means that an art history of Africa requires an understanding of the local conditions of production and use. But the mastery of the individual (whether a potter, carver, weaver or blacksmith) should not be underesti mated for its importance within the artistic and social communities of the region. There are growing fields of research that demonstrate that the African artist is recognised for skill and creative prowess as an individual. beyond the merely functional. The elaboration of utilitarian objects is as much a part of artistic practice as the production of particular commissioned works. An axe or yam-hoe may be as much the object of artistic intent as the large carved statue or masquerade mask In a situation such as this it is difficult to make distinctions between arts and crafts. Any consideration of African art must include the arts of pottery, weav ing and embroidery, for some of the greatest aspects of African creativity are displayed in the production of these arts. Finally, the attempt to understand an African art history also encounters other, more practical, problems. Many of the materials used in the production of art are friable, and so the time scale of the material record tends to be rather recent. Much of what is known about 42 African art derives from the late-nine Contact with Europe teenth and twentieth century. Archaeo logical investigations are revealing more about the time-scale of many African societies and the study of the artistic production of these societies is an important source of information about now forgotten communities. It is the traditions from southern Nigeria that are perhaps the best known archaic examples of African art, although the civilisations of Ethiopia, the East African coast, and great Zimbabwe all produced objects that enhance our un derstanding of the societies from which they come. However, what is known about African art mostly derives from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This is primarily because the material remains of African art don't generally date back beyond this time, but also and importantly this was the time that Europe encroached on the interior of Africa. Origins of African art The earliest art in Africa is painting. Long before European Palaeolithic paintings were discovered, wall paint ings from both Southern Africa and the Saharan region were known about. The earliest paintings and engravings in the Sahara date from c.6000 BC. They depict giant masked figures, hunters and ani mals now extinct in the region. Later less naturalistic works chart the intro duction of cattle and chariots pulled by horses. It is possible that some of these paintings show the earliest rise of the The process of colonialisation bought many societies into direct contact with Europe for the first time. The art of these societies was initially regarded in Europe as mere curiosity, until Picasso and a group of Parisian artists, as well as Epstein and Moore in Britain, began to take the formal dexterity of African art seriously. The interest of European art ists has left a legacy in the way in which we now view African art. As they were primarily concerned with sculpted form itissculptureandespeciallywoodsculp ture that is nowadays regarded as the African art par-excellance. The diver sity and richness of these kinds of art forms, and the customs and cultures which relate to them, extends well beyond the empires of southwestern Nigeria. Egyptian empires and the trade across the Sahara, a reminder that Egypt is as much a part of Africa as it is of the Mediterranean basin. Even earlier paintings exist in Southern Africa. The rock painting tradition of the San bushman groups is the world's longest continuous artistic tradition, dating from the first millennium BC to the nineteenth century, when San paint ings would depict the arrival of the first European settlers in Southern Africa alongside the Eland, an animal integral to San mythology. 43 Wood sculpture devotees at worship of the deity (as in Forms of wood sculpture vary consid the Shango staff UEA 227), but it is rare erably, but on the whole there is a gen that the sculpture is regarded as the eral concern with the representation of deity itself. It may be that the sculpture the human figure, the animal world and is imbued with some order of meta the world of the deceased. Concern with physical power, by the addition of vari the ancestors lies behind much of the art ous medicinal or magical substances, produced in Africa. Different societies but the actual worship have different means of demonstrating figure is rare in African pagan religions (see note). respect for the deceased. In formal state a sculpted societies, that is, those that have a king or ruler at the centre of the social organi Understandably most of the richest sation, the ancestral cults tend to be wood sculptural traditions of Africa are centred on the individual figure of the found in the forest belts of West and king, or the head of families. This is the Central Africa. Societies such as the Gola, case in Benin and the Kuba societies of Dan, Yoruba and Ibo in West Africa, central Africa, where individual repre and the Fang, Kuba and Jokwe in central sentations of the king may be made. Africa have rich and traditions in carving. High productivity of sculp In acephalous societies (that is those tural works has meant that in these soci without defined rulers) the cult of the eties the work of the individual master ancestors tends to be more generalised is identifiable. and may include the use of masquer Recent changes ades to honour the dead. Art history, however, is increasingly Sculpture is not only produced for an confined to the work of past masters. cestral cults. Traditional religious sys New conditions of production and tems of many African societies were, consumption, new needs and interests and still are, often based around the in Africa, have led to a decline in the very close relationship between humans patronage of traditional sculpture. In and deities. Often lesser deities are seen certain areas new patrons have emerged, as the intermediaries of a more distant and it is not uncommon to find Chris high god. Representations of individual tian iconography carved for use :inside deities are however, quite rare. Rather, the ever increasing (and increasingly sculpted form is used as paraphernalia popular) Christian churches. in the propitiation of the cult figure. Old cults have not necessarily died away (although a great number have). Rather Often sculpture is of representations of 44 there are spectacular mutations caused by people's willingness to establish new forms of religious worship on old prac tices. The art of the old cults may be maintained, often supporting a certain sense of identity and continuity with distinctive eyes. It has been suggested that these clay figures were modelled using a subtractive technique, that is taking material away from the core rather than the additive procedure that is more common in clay modelling. This suggests that a wood carving tradition might have existed at the base of the N ok terracotta tradition. the past. Although patronage may have died out in one area, it re-emerges in others. For instance, while there has been a decline in woodcarving in Nigeria, weaving maintains an impressive creativity. Makonde black-wood carving in Tanzania is so popular that it now almost defines what African art is, both to the tourists at airports and to the new African bourgeoisie. There is an effer vescence in contemporary African artistic production which includes the woodcarver working in the rain forest, the urban signboard painter painting barber shop signs, and the new art school graduates that exhibit in the capital cities of Europe. Sub~Saharan Continuities in form have been sug gested between the N ok traditions and those of southern Nigeria. The empire of Ife (founded c.1200 AD) developed one of the greatest artistic traditions of the Continent. Ife, the spiritual centre of the Yoruba people, developed as an empire ruled by a divine king known as the Oba. The Oba was the central figure in a cosmological system that even today is the major structuring principle in many Yoruba towns. In Ife the figure of the Oba was celebrated or commemo rated by lifelike representations in terracotta or bronze. The Ife sculptures are extremely realistic, if idealised, although like the N ok terracottas the head is in larger proportion to the body than is usual in Western sculpture. Art The earliest known sculptural traditions in sub-Saharan Africa emerged c.500 BC in northern Nigeria, where terracotta heads were found in tin mines on the Jos Plateau. Although the distribution of these heads is both temporally and spatially disparate the culture that they represent is known as N ok. Benin City and Empire He is only one city state in Nigeria that developed a brass casting tradition. Other towns such as Igbo Ukwu in east ern Nigeria also cast images in brass. It is perhaps Benin, the most prolific cast ing town in Africa, that is best known. Benin city is located in southwestern The Nok sculptures are naturalistic terracottas, with large heads and 45 Nigeria. It lies in the rainforest belt west the Oba's palace, from which the Oba of the Niger river and just north of the controlled and ran his kingdom. In this area where that river becomes a delta he was assisted by an elaborate cadre of and disgorges into the Atlantic Ocean. chiefs, of which there were three major The city is populated now by some groups: palace chiefs, town chiefs, and 160,000 people, mainly of Edo origin. To the west they are bordered by the Yoruba the Uzama, a group of chiefs that headed the Edo villages that lay outside the city walls. groups and to the east by the Igbo and the Itsekerri. The palace was the centre of artistic activity in the state. It was in the palace Although now a part of a modern and thriving nation state, Benin city was that the guild of brass-casters worked, once the centre of an extensive empire as the Oba was the main, if not only that developed from the fourteenth century. At its height it held an influ 'legal' patron of the products of the guild. Castings were produced in the form of ence over large tracts of what is now plaques to adorn the walls of the palace, southern Nigeria. Bounded by walls of city of Benin over 130 km. square, serving as visual reminders of the might was compared favourably to cities nowned castings are those of the Benin Europe by Portuguese travellers, who first encountered the city in the fifteenth heads, which were cast to sit on century. By the seventeenth century Altars were created for the commemo trading contact with the Portuguese had been established, which resulted in a ration of the current Oba's ancestors, collaboration in ivory carving that pro lineage. of empire. However the most re ancestral altars of deceased Obas. establishing continuity of the royal duced exquisite Afro-Portuguese ivory objects such as saltcellars. \A/orks of art in brass, wood and ivory acted as visual reminders to people of As with Ife, which various myths link the social and cosmological structure of with Benin, the head of the Benin em the town, or furnished the religious pire was the Oba, a divine king. It is said that the empire of Benin was the area shrines and political ceremonies that embodied that order. In 1897 the social that the Oba had control over the life order of the town was irrevocably dis and death of his subjects. The Oba was believed to have status as a divinity; he rupted by British intervention in the affairs of Benin. was regarded as second to the gods, a position that was dearly portrayed in the art of Benin. At the heart of Benin is 46 Head for an Oba Nigeria: Benin Brass, iron Early 16th Century h. 22.5 cm UEA232 47 The royal altar head subject's status as an Oba. It is possible that this head is the Oba Ozolua and The institution of the ancestral altar head is found in most Benin households. It was (and still is) contingent upon a chief's sons to set up an altar to their was made in or about 1505. A royal sceptre UEA 231 is one of the finest pieces of deceased father. Inheritance is only guar anteed after the senior son has installed an altar. The royal family is no different and representations of the Oba's head stand on an ancestral shrine created by ivory carving to have emerged from the City's guild of ivory and wood carvers, the Igbesamwan. It is a unique piece from the hand of an unknown master, and is therefore difficult to date. It is also un clear whether it is a sceptre or the base of a fly whisk Fly whisks are certainly an important part of the regalia of all Obas his successor. Royal altar heads were cast in brass using the lost wax process. Only the Oba was allowed to authorise brass cast ing, which would be carried out by the palace guild of casters, the!guneromwon. A series of royal altar heads are known about and a chronology dating from the fourteenth century has been proposed for them. UEA232is generally regarded as an early head, dated by the excellence of the casting and the serene naturalism of the face. of southwestern Nigeria. guese contact brass was a rare material, and much of the modelling for the head may have been done on a clay core rather than in wax. The carving depicts an Oba of Benin on horseback. The horse and rider motif is commonly found across southern Nigeria as a depiction of the stranger, a position that the Oba, as the stranger king when seen from outside Benin, would hold. The ownership of horses was also an important indication of wealth and status. The Oba is shown wearing full ceremonial regalia. His headdress is of coral beads and extends down his back. The base of the sceptre is carved as a pair of jaws, probably those of a python. That the modelling of the face is natural The Yoruba istic is a particular indicator of the early date for this head, as later heads became more schematic. They also tend to dis play a great elaboration of regalia. This one shows only a simple coral bead headdress and neck ring, symbols of the Benin is not the only empire known to have developed in the southwestern region of Nigeria. The social structure of The cast is very thin. Before the Portu the neighbouring Yoruba people was also based on hierarchical state systems, although only one of these, that of Oyo, 48 Royal sceptre Nigeria:Benin Ivory 16th~18th Century h. 38 cm UEA231 49 deities, which often had dear identities and mythical stories of origin, as well as sometimes being allied to certain natu approached the same influence and con trol as the state of Benin. The empire of Benin and the states of the Yoruba are linked in myths of origin, for the people of Benin claim that their founding Oba came from the town of Ile-Ife, the reli gious centre of the Yoruba. ral phenomena. Orisha are rarely depicted in icono graphic representation. Rather, carvings depict aspects of the worship and devotion by priests, priestesses, and devotees. The cults of certain of these Oris ha, such as Shango, god of thunder, developed into instruments of political domination, especially under the Oyo. The basic unit of Yoruba social organi zation is the town. Yoruba towns are nominally headed by an Oba, who is supported by a number of chiefly groups. Closely involved in the hierar chy of the town at one time were the The Yoruba are renowned for their priests of the various Oris ha, the Yoruba gods. Each town operated as a minor state with vassal villages. From the six teenth century the town of Oyo devel oped into a large empire controlling the entire western Yoruba region, stretch woodcarving, with earlier known pieces deriving from the seventeenth century. The quantity and quality of carvings makes it possible to discern a number of different styles, and the hands of indi vidual carvers. ing into what is now the Republic of Benin (formerly Dahomey). In the nineteenth century the old town of Oyo was decimated by Nupe raiders from the town of Ilorin, and the Oyo empire re-centred around the town of Ibadan. Nowadays there are over twenty million Yoruba people in Nigeria, and their political and com mercial influence is extensive. The subjects of the carvings are diverse, and were not simply created for the Orisha shrines. An Oba, as well as the generally wealthy, would commission carvings for the adornment of their compounds. The number of different masquerade cults, which still perform regularly, all require wood carved masks. Yoruba religion, before the influence of Islam and Christianity, was predomi nantly based around the worship of dif Wood is not the only Yoruba artistic medium. Brass casting, bead weaving, and a multiplicity of textile arts are all ferent Orisha. A belief in a high god (Olodumare) was supplemented by the worship of a pantheon of individual part of an artistic diversity that still in forms everyday life in southwestern Nigeria. 50 Shango dance wand (Oshe Shango) Nigeria: Oyo; Yomba Wood, beads 19th/eady 20th Century h, 38 cm UEA227 51 The cult of Shango Shere gourd rattle and in the left another Staffs such as UEA 227, known as Oshe Oshe. The bilobes on the head are depic tions of the edun ara (thunder bolts) that Shango is said to send to earth: a defin Shango, are an important part of the paraphernalia of the Shango cult priest or priestess. The cult of Shango, the Yoruba deity of thunder, is particularly associated with thetownofOyo. Shango is said to have been the fourth Alaafin (Oba) of Oyo, a tempestuous king given to making magic and trickery. The peo ple of Oyo, tiring of their king, cast him into the wilderness where he commit ted suicide, entered the ground, and was immediately deified as the capri cious god of thunder. ing feature of all Oshe Shango regard less of their quality. This extremely fine piece is carved following a style familiar to the Ogbomosho area of northwestern Yorubaland. Divination Bowls known as agere ifa are an impor tant part of the paraphernalia of Ha priests (babalawo) of the central and western Yoruba, a region where palm nuts are the primary means of consult ing Ha. Ifa, the primary divination oracle of Yoruba religion, is consulted by the babalawo casting sixteen palm nuts between right and left hand. Depending on how many kernels are left at the end of the cast, either one or two, a mark is made in dust, which The devotees of the cult of Shango, one of the most widespread of Yoruba cults, are noted for following the energetic and unpredictable nature of the deity. If a house is struck by lightening the Shango priest divines why Shango was angered by the household and in return is allowed to carry off property of the house. usually covers a carved divination tray known as an opon ifa. Dances for the cult reflect two aspects of This Oshe (UEA 227) depicts the latter state. The woman devotee is carved in an aspect of seemingly serene medita The process is repeated either four or eight times. The combination of marks left on the board is one permutation of either sixteen (after four casts) or two hundred and fifty six (after sixteen casts) possible combinations. Each com bination is then related to one of the verses of the Odu Ifa, the sacred poems of the oracle, which suggest to the babalawo the possible sacrifices that his tion, a kneeling applicant before the god. In her right hand she holds the client must make to assuage his or her problems. the deity. During dances for Shango the god is said to enter (mount) the heads of his devotees, sending them into a possession trance that is either wild and uncontrollable or completely serene. 52 Ifa divination cup Nigeria: Northern Yoruba Wood Late 19th/early 20th Century h. 24 cm UEA228 53 The Agere as a place of storage for the palm kernels is integral to the system. The kernels are stored in the bowl of the the strengthening sun. As the mist rises the early morning business of the town becomes plain: men return from farms laden with yams or cassava; women prepare the first cooking fires; and clouds of dust are seen coming from the front of compounds as young children stoop and sweep away the detritus of Agere, and it is from the bowl that they are scooped in the process of divination. The caryatids (support column) of these bowls depict a wide range of themes from Yoruba social life. The mother and child (as in UEA 228) is one that occurs the night. Everywhere people greet one another, inquiring after the night's rest and thanking God that they and their families woke well. often, perhaps related to one of the cen tral concerns of petitioners of Ha, that they be given children. During the wet season this mist hides The carving of this piece is an illustra tion of the extreme individualism that can characterise Yoruba carvings. The distortion of the figure may relate to the fact that the body is thereby visible underneath the bowl, but it is equally plausible that this schematic style is the signature style of an unknown carver. other, stranger, things. For three days at the end of July extraordinary figures can be seen emerging from the forest and running toward the centre of the town. Some of these figures are dressed in long robes, others are wrapped in layers of green palm leaves and yet others in the bushy weave of split raffia palms. They yell and shout and dance, run and gambol in the town with impu nity as nobody will dare to stop their progression. The beginning of the major festival of the town is marked by the emergence of the town's masquerades. The Masquerade In southern Nigeria the rains begin in April and continue to fall until Septem ber. In Ekiti, where I lived in a small town, the middle of the rainy season is the major festival period in towns throughout the district. It is the time when the yams are harvested and there is a general surplus for people in these mainly agricultural communities. What are masquerades? The masquer ades described above are unique to a particular region of Nigeria, yet mas querades are found throughout Africa. Commonly the masquerade is regarded as being a human figure in masked dis The mornings of this period are charac terised by a damp and grey mist which rises from the green of the rainforest, and is caught in the branches of the larger trees before being burnt off by guise and the word is often synony mous with the masks worn at festivals. This is not entirely what a masquerade 54 is. The wood carved mask often regarded as definitive of African art is but one 1. Where the mask acts as a dramatic device, disguising the identity of the performer but not producing any active or qualitative change in the identity of the performer. part of a wider ensemble that is the masquerade. Masquerades are complex assemblages of materials, of which the mask is only one element, and the cos tume of a masquerade is itself only one part of a wider performance that in cludes dance, music and theatre. 2. Where the wearing of the mask signi fies a transformation of meta-physical status in the performer. The identity of the performer is transformed, rather as in possession trances, and is subsumed under the identity of the new presence, that of the masquerade. The most important element of mas querade is some form of disguise, some element of masking. Masquerades vary throughout Africa and there is a multi plicity of forms, styles and types, which function for different purposes and effects. Yet the feature that is common to all masquerades is the notion that the performer of the masquerade is unseen, that the identity of the masquerader is essentially unknown. 3. Where the mask is itself the object of metaphysical presence, power or en ergy. The thing that is represented by the mask is the power or spirit that is actually the object of praise. In each of these categories is the idea that in some way the person has changed. The effects of this change vary from masquerade type to masquerade type, largely depending upon the con text within which the masquerade is used. In some instances the effect of the transformation is not very profound, the masquerade is used (as masks were in ancient Greece) only to establish a dramatic presence. In other instances the effects of putting a mask on may be such that the wearer enters into an en tirely different personality, there is a substantive change, often said to be the spirit entering and possessing the per former. In other instances the mask, as a thing, is what is important and the Transformation AH masquerade implies transformation yet this does not imply that all masquer ades have the same effect. There are different levels of metaphysical changes in the use of masquerades in Africa and the notions of transformation involved. Indeed when talking about masks in Africa we cannot take it for granted that what is understood in the West as a mask is necessarily the same thing that is understood in Africa, or that the concept does not vary across Africa. Generally however the effects that mas querades have can be divided into three groups: 55 identity of the masquerader may not be generalised spirits that come from very well disguised. Common to all mas heaven. It is therefore common to find querades though, is the idea that the masquerades associated with funeral transformation of the human person rituals, either at burials or at remem creates a powerful presence, although brance ceremonies. Often the masquer the degree of power may vary from ade represents the deceased's final de mask to mask. parture into the world of the ancestors. Uses in context The sense of movement from the living Given that masquerading has so many to the dead is often seen as the culmina different potential effects it is tion of a series of life-cycle rituals that unsurprising to find that masks are used begin with the transformation of boys in a variety of different contexts. The into men in initiation ceremonies (mas use of masquerades runs from those querade is a predominantly male activ that are purely for entertainment to those ity). During these ceremonies, which used in ritual. Masks may be used to generally take place away from normal comment on facets of the local village town life, boys are exposed to the ap life, being a political commentator, or pearance of masquerades, often to scare they may accomplish a profound meta them and then to serve some didactic physical meditation on human identity. purpose. Generally, however, masks are used in Women are generally excluded from contexts that introduce some extra wearing masks or even, supposedly, human dimension into the general knowing what is in the masqueradeo running of social life. Appearances of The exclusion of women lies at the base masquerades are usually associated with of much masquerade practice, and it is contexts in which some form of spirit or often reported that the myths about deity is invoked. The range of situations masquerade start with women owning within which this might happen is large, masquerades that are then takenby men. and varies from social group to social One aspect of masquerade may be that group. It is possible, however, to outline of the control of supposed women's some general situations in which mas powers; witchcraft is taken for granted querades occur, in many African societies and masquer ades are said to counter action of witcheso Very often masquerades are associated with an ancestral presence. They are often said to represent the dead, either The very nature of masquerades, their as individual named ancestors or as disguising nature, means that they are 56 Often masquerades are associated with the forest, being spirits from heaven (or the world of the ancestors) that emerge from the bush. Those that represent ani mals have widespread distribution. The excellent components in secret societies. There is often an element of initiation in these societies, and gener ally secret societies act as cult associa tions. Membership may be open to all adult men at some level but is often types of animal represented vary from society to society, as does the way of representing them, yet there seems to be a common concern in African masking with the elements of the wild, animals that are found in the bush away from the towns and villages. Animal repre sentations may derive from mythical stories, where the animal was involved in the creation of mankind (often more docile animals - such as antelopes), or highly proscriptive at the senior level. Masquerades may be used .in these societies in several ways: in order to reinforce the control that the societies have over those who are not initiated into their secrets; to make and carry out judgements; to pass commentary on the village leaders; to find and expel witches; and occasionally to provide a disguise in warfare, which in West Africa was often carried out by junior society mem bers. Often the forms of masks, the types they may be frightening masks used in political domination. of iconography displayed, relate to the differing types of use. The other common icon used in mas querade is the human face. The real face is effaced by a representation of a face on the mask The human face may be used as a character mask, a dramatic device to establish an identity, or it may represent an entirely separate identity, being more as a spirit in human guise. The human face is also used to represent the ancestors, not in any sense of direct portraiture but rather as a generalised (extra) human entity. Indeed in certain Form and representation Within the same masquerade corpus there can be a number of different styles, each of which may have a different effect.Yet despite differences in carving styles there are common, and often strik ing, continuities in the broad ranges of subject matter found in African mas querades. Although the range of formal representations in African masks is very wide, iconography, the subject matter, may be remarkably coherent. However, masquerade groups the face is used to represent mythical figures that lie at the base of many masquerade groups. Sometimes the human face may be sur although similar iconography is used, circumstances and purposes of use vary from society to society. Thus a bush cow mask might be used for one purpose in one society, but have an altogether different meaning in another. rounded by additional iconographic carvings reflecting elements of human society as well as the spirit world. 57 The one thing that all masks share in common however is that they are hu man representations of an unknown world. Thus all masks are the product of the human imagination, imagining the essentially unknowable. This means that the range and stylistic conventions of masquerades, within the limits of tech nology available, can be extreme. What is perhaps more of a surprise to the comparative ethnographer is that so many common elements exist between the masquerades of different societies. Note. Pagan is used here as in the origi nal (Latin) sense of being from the coun tryside, or from the village. Further reading Ezra, K 1992 The Art of Benin: the Perls collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Fagg, W.,Permberton,J. and Holcombe, B. 1982 Yoruba Sculpture of West Africa, New York, Knopf. 58 Some African Objects John Heron Dickson SAHARA NIGER CHAD ATLANTIC OCEAN 0° (Equator) ZAIRE 7 1. Asante region 2. Benin region 6 3. Dan region 4. Fang region 5. Ibo region 6. Jokwe region 7. Kuba region 8. Yoruba region West and Central Africa - sketch map 59 An Asante Akua Ba An Asante myth tells of the woman Akua who was barren; a priest advised her to commission a carver to make her a small wooden doll. She was told to take care of it in every way as if it were a real baby and carry it on her back tucked into her waist or body doth. Even though other women mocked her she did these things and eventually had a beautiful daughter. So Asante women have followed Akua's example. This Akua Ba (plural Akua mma), meaning Akua child, is not meant just to be played with. It is principally a fertility aid or, more particular1y, is designed to help the mother give birth to a beautiful baby girl. Conversely it is supposed that if the mother during pregnancy looks on a monkey, on any deformity or even a badly carved figure, she risks bearing a child like it. Asante women customarily cherish the thought of a baby girl rather than a boy. Women enjoy status in Asante society and family property passes through the female line. The mother's head of family would be a maternal uncle or maybe a brother. Daughters too are of course popular for the help they can give their mother with younger children at home, particularly when she goes out to market or is with the boys fetching firewood or carrying water perhaps from miles away. The dolls are fashioned to display the Asante's traditional idea of beauty - the high forehead, the long straight nose, the small mouth and the long neck. Since the body is usually hidden beneath clothing there is no need for the lower half to be depicted in any detail, but the design of the body, arms and base allows it to be easily held or to stand on its own. Occasionally Akua Mma are found depicted with full length arms and legs. Such figures were probably not carried on the person. Most Akua mma are dressed in tiny beads hanging from the ears and round the neck, at the ends of the arms and round the top of the base. Some, including this one, have engraved designs on the back of the head, possibly a device against witchcraft which was always very much feared lest the baby were harmed; so too the necklet of magical bits and pieces, and the small scars on the face thought to provide protection against infantile convulsions. The wood from which this figure is made is naturally a pale colour. It has been darkened artificially, probably by being smoked over a fire and then covered in a patina of soot mixed with palm oil. 60 The tools used to make this figure would have been very simple- little adzes, knives, spoke shaves, chisels, gouges and awls. Abrasive leaves used to take the place of sandpaper until the latter became freely available. With the object held between the toes or knees accidents were prone to happen and the carver might say prayers and possibly sacrifice a chicken before he began work, to prevent the tools from slipping and cutting him. Ritual Doll (Akua Ba, plural Akua Mma) West Africa, Ghana, Asante Wood, beads Late 19th century/early 20th h. 35.6 cm UEA226 61 A Dan Gegon Mask The Dan people come from both sides of the Liberian/Ivory Coast border. They live in independent village communities, each with its own chief and elders; there is otherwise no hierarchical structure to their society. Masquerades play an important role in their culture, sometimes for entertainment but often fulfilling a range of social or educational functions. Some types of masquerade are peculiar to certain areas and there may be local variations in design of mask and costume. Masks are sometimes 'promoted' to perform another function and new masks are being commissioned all the while; all of which makes classification hazardous. This mask is known as Gegon, a word which is difficult to translate precisely but has a connotation both of male masquer and male awesome being. It becomes easier to understand when one remembers that in Dan traditional belief all creation, animate and inanimate, contains du, an invisible force, power or spirit. One type of du is known as a mask spirit and is waiting in some remote uninhabited region to make contact with a sympathetic man by means of a dream. This dream is the man's authority to commission the appropriate mask and to perform the masquerade. The masquerade, Gegon, is nowadays performed principally for entertainment but in former times provided instruction in Dan creation myth. Prominent in the myth is the hornbill, a striking bird which people from many different parts of the world believe to be imbued with mystical powers. There are many subspecies of hornbill. Most in West Africa are predominantly black and white and have prominent bills often surmounted by a strange helmet-like casque. One variety which commonly inhabits Dan country (ceratogymna elata) is exceptionally big (3ft from head to tail) with a grotesque noisy flight It likes to live in the tops of the forest trees and is seldom visible until it comes to feed in the palm groves; palm nuts are its favourite food. The female is differentiated by light blue skin on the face and a rufous head and crest. The blue element is repeated in a closely related species with bright cobalt blue skin beneath the eye and below the beak. Dance and costume in the masquerade may alter with time but they still display some of this hornbill's attributes. Dan myth relates how that when the mother of the primordial hornbill died the hornbiH 'hovered in the aching void, there where today the earth is'. It tried to find an earthly realm to bury its mother but there was no mud in which to bury her. So it flew to God for help. In the end it buried mother in the casque of its beak. The hornbill is credited with having taught the Dan the value of palm nuts, now a staple part of 62 Dance mask, bird fo:rm West Africa, Liberia and Ivory Coast Northern Dan peoples Wood 20th century h. 35.5 cm UEA 608 63 their diet. It was to the hornbill that God first showed the raffia palm. He told it to wait by the palms and fed the bird with palm nuts until he had made it more land to live in. The mask which we see in the Sainsbury Collection is a dislocated part of the masking costume to which it was meant to belong. The long beak is usually fringed with black monkey skin but the holes by which wooden pegs would have fixed the monkey skin to the beak are in this case missing. Perhaps the mask was never finished. Gegon wears rows of cowrie shells above the forehead and a cylindrical headpiece covered with fur, cloth, plumes and white feathers. He wears a voluminous blue and white cloth around his torso. A thick raffia (palm leaf) skirt hangs from the hips, which to Dan eyes signifies power and strength. He carries cow or horse tails in both hands. The whole costume so transforms him in the dance that he does not impersonate the du, but is the du. The mask as we see it bears no obvious relationship to a hornbill; the humanoid nostrils, the mouth and the concave form between forehead and beak are hardly consistent. The intended viewers would have seen it otherwise. With its feathery headdress, the dancers coloured costume, and particularly in the context of the performance, the initiated would have recognised it as neither wholly man, bird nor beast, but Gegon. Gegon is accompanied by singers and musicians. He begins moving hesitantly, losing his footing and swaying. Then he gently waves the fly whisks with arms outstretched, the body bent forward to give the impression of a large bird flying. From time to time he mimes a bird pecking the ground. In some versions of the masquerade he whirls the cows' tails round at knee level, making people jump out of the way, knocking over pots and generally causing commotion among women and animals. What the connection of this is with myth is unclear but it is said to signify that if you interfere with other peoples' business you may get hurt; perhaps all part of the fun and entertainment. 64 A Dan Ceremonial Spoon Dan society has no hierarchic structure. The people live in separate village communities but share membership of a secret society (Go) to which all young males are initiated and which governs social order and customary law. Each community has its chief. Prestige and status are of the greatest importance, not only within the community but between neighbouring chiefs. To this end villages will try to outdo each other in gift exchange, feasts and public displays of affluence. Not to be able to contribute to standards of excellence, whether agricultural or to do with carving or music, constitutes a social stigma. In former times such people could find themselves part of a gift exchange as a slave or, at the worst, the victim of cannibalism. No village would ever accept a fugitive from another. Such motivation must have encouraged the care and attention to detail seen in the carving of Dan masks and other objects especially those designed for ceremonial purposes. This ceremonial spoon was carved with as much care as any statuette. The legs are identical, in their round and firm shapes, to those of female figures of that region and at the same time would have fitted conveniently into the palm of the hand. The volume of the spoon bowl balances the lower limbs which are anchored to the ground by the wide base of the feet. The long length of the linking piece between 'head' and limbs creates an elegant balance. The reverse of the bowl, the calves of the legs and parts of the torso are decorated with incised patterns. These may reflect the scarified patterns with which the elegant Dan formerly adorned their bodies. Dan country is well known for its black mud. Carvings would be buried in it to blacken them and then subsequently made shiny with the sap of a tree (pha), painted on with chicken feathers. Ceremonial spoons are called wakemia or wunkirmian meaning spoons associated with festivals. Only the most eminent women are entitled to own them and then only after having been judged fit to do so by the spirit (du) which will take up residence in the spoon and which must first appear to the would-be holder in a dream. She then assumes the envied title of Wakede meaning 'she who is active at festivals'. This woman will be in charge of gathering the food for the most important meals, such as the feast which marks the boys' return from the circumcision camps, or during the work of slashing and burning the forest to create new areas for agriculture. 65 Ceremonial spoon West Africa, Liberia and Ivory Coast The Dan people Wood Late 19th/early 20th century h. 46.5 cm UEA206 66 Another important feast takes place when the grand mask of the village receives the masks of other villages in the area. The food for these feasts will be prepared by Wakede' s assistants under her supervision. The responsibility remains hers and gives her the right to parade through the village with the spoon brandished or angled to display small coins or rice mixed with meat of animals from her own herd. She is accompanied by helpers with plates and fans and by a band of musicians. The woman's chief assistant will extol her liberality and urge her to outdo her previous efforts. At the dose of the performance she will receive the thanks of the chief and other important village figures. Other spoons performing the same function have handles carved as the torso and legs of a woman or as a beautiful female head; others with the head of a cow or a ram; in some cases with twin bowls. Some people have suggested the bowls of these spoons are intuitive or subconscious representations of the womb and fertility. Giacometti in his Surrealist period could have been thinking on these lines when he used a 'wakaemia' as the basis for his sculpture 'Spoon Woman' of 1926/27. The SainsburyCentre's example would have Ceremonial §poon We§t Africa, Libe:rfa and Ivory Coast The Dan people Wood Late 19th/eady 20th century h. 46.5 cm UEA206 particularly appealed to his interest in the incongruous. It has six or seven toes on each foot. But then -that may be how the Wakede dreamt it. A Yombe Nkisi Figure In many parts of Africa figurines are made and empowered to protect against illness and evils of all sorts, and to act as aggressive agents against enemies. They are loosely dubbed 'fetishes'. A Yombe version of these is called Nkisi (plural Minkisi). The figurine would be made Nkisi by a cult priest; it would become the animate presence of an ancestral spirit, to Yombe eyes every bit as real and alive as a human being. If cut or damaged, its failure to bleed would be proof of its magic. But its presence and power would be lost unless the owner used it properly and followed the priest's directions. It had to be 'fed' with magic medicines, probably a concoction of blood, wax, rubber, bark, roots, seeds etc. Amongst the Yombe the secret medicines were kept in bundles of raffia, in calabashes or other containers and often in a bag attached to the figure. It looks as if such a bag was once attached to this figure's chest; its traces can be seen in the discoloured patch with small nail holes at top and bottom. An Nkisi could both afflict with illness and cure it. Through its presence and power it could help the owner to live well and long and, in due course, be received with honour by the deceased. This Nkisi is of high rank. The skull cap is a royal one. It bears a design of triangles round the border with a quatre foil leaf set in a five point star in the centre. The armlets are another indication of high rank The crossed leg posture, with the head resting on the right hand, is a convention signifying the thoughtfulness and wisdom found amongst chiefs and elders. It may have been the property of a whole village rather than an individual. The figure's brown patina is typical of many Yombe figures. The face is treated in a cubistic manner with three distinct planes and a square chin. The eyes stare, challenging and confrontational; the black eyeballs set in exaggerated white olives force a reaction from the viewer. If they are awesome, even repellent, this would be in the character of Nkisi. The ears have been pierced but the metal rings which would have hung from them are missing. The right forearm is unnaturally long and the left arm much shortened to fit the space between shoulder and foot, and yet without disturbing the naturalistic impact of the whole figure. The legs, crossed as they are, suggest a conventionalised pose; too uncomfortable to be natural. The hands and feet are carved with precise attention to detail, as in the thumb nail of the left hand. The edge of the base is decorated with a raised nail head motif, with a cross inside a little square at either end. The back is decorated with twelve bosses on either side reflecting the Yombe custom of body decoration in geometric patterns. 68 Seated figure Central Africa, The Congo Republic and Zaire The Yombe people Wood, porcelain Late 19th/early 20th century h. 27.9 cm UEA915 69 Dance mask Central Africa, Zaire Bakuba Kuba People) raffia doth, beads, cowries, metal 20th century h. 35.6 cm UEA 594 70 A Kuba Mask The Bakuba come from south-central Zaire. They boast a long and distinguished history. In the 17th century, or perhaps earlier, a number of related tribal groups were unified under the King of the Bushoong whose dynasty still rules the kingdom. The kingdom became one of the richest in Africa, not so much by force of arms as by new practices in agriculture and an expanding economy. The Bakuba learned how to harvest two or even three crops from one plot of land in the same year. They planted newly discovered crops from America, including maize, groundnuts, cassava and even tobacco, from as early as the 17th century. Pipe smoking became a prized form of relaxation and pipes an art form. Kuba society was hierarchical with a royal court, provincial chiefs and a wealthy elite. Power and status were cherished. The king would proclaim special occasions as feast days to be followed by masquerades when he and his officials would wear the richly beaded and embroidered costumes to which they were entitled with all the accoutrements of their office. The King's ceremonial costume was (and still is) the most flamboyantly endowed of all, a mass of beadwork, cowries and feathers. The present King's costume weighs 84 kilos when complete. During the long process of dressing, the King's wives sing propitiatory songs to soothe him. Other comparable occasions would enable the host to display his domestic treasures such as pots, cups and pipes. The skill, lavishness and imagination with which these were carved and decorated were symbols of status. Decoration mostly followed standard patterns each with its own name but with scope left for the craftsman's individuality in his choice of shape and form. The design of the more important masks, particularly the royal masks, also followed recognised principles having been introduced by a former ruler to tell, through dance, a particular story or piece of history. They were made from combinations wood and cloth, the doth originally being made from either raffia or the bark of trees. They were decorated coloured beads and cowries. Cowries were first imported by the Kuba in the 17th century. Their exotic nature have contributed to association with kingship and rank They rarity subsequently became a currency for trade and exchange. Being relatively indestructible, in limited supply and easy to carry they were very suited to the purpose. 71 There are three patterns of Kuba royal mask. The Sainsbury Collection's example belongs to a type known as Ngady Amwaash and was introduced by a lady of the royal family called Nkogady. She had been appointed Queen Regent sometime in the 16th and 17th century when there was no male heir available. On account of her femininity she was having a difficult time. It was taboo for men to see any evidence of menstrual discharge. Nkogady took care of this by having the walls of her palace compound heightened. She was one day greatly embarrassed when she was thought to be defiling the palace square where the Council was held. Tradition relates that such experiences moved her to try to enhance the position and dignity of women by invoking the spiritual presence of the wife of Woot, the mythical founder of the dynasty, in this form of the dance mask. This lady was said to have been not just wife but also sister and so a very reputable lady. Even so Nkogadywas constrained to find a man and ask him, rather than a woman, to dance in imitation of a woman's footsteps. A sequel to the story is that the Bakuba have had only kings ever since. The mask (UEA 594) has a wooden face surmounted by a raffia doth head piece decorated with cowries, and a coif with an open work border. Much of the head piece covered with another layer of material, mostly blue or a bluey appears to have green with red round the beaded top edge. Traces can still be seen where the material has been cut away from the beads and cowries. This probably explains the good condition of the remaining fabric and why the coif is rather darker than the material above. Separately carved wooden ears are sewn on to the head piece. The coif and upper part of the face are painted with a design of alternating dark and light triangles known as lakyeeng langeny - the razor. The same design sometimes occurs on cosmetic and razor boxes. Three brass studs are fixed to the nasal ridge. The eyes have narrow slits which cannot have been easy to see through. It was important that no one should see any sign of humanity beneath the mask. The eyebrows are underlined with three rows of small beads. The three painted lines descending from each eye are known as tears (yooshdy). A broad band of strands of small blue and white beads goes from the ridge of the nose over the mouth and down to the chin. It is bound tight to the face with fibre ties going through little holes to the inside of the mask A thick plaited cord performs a partly similar function, but ends in a knotted loop beneath the chin (not always visible when mounted on display). Similar arrangements were used in the case of 'blind' masks to guide the dancer. Anyone wishing to talk to the dancer would pull on the cord to attract his attention. 72 In this case such a thick cord inside the mask must have made it very uncomfortable to wear. Most masks of this type have a knotted bunch of plaited fibres at the back of the hood. In this case it is missing but odds and ends of black and blue material may be remnants of some such thing. A curious little metal cup may be a bell with a broken danger. There are cases where bells on African masks have been added to repel evil spirits, the concept being that evil spirits are powerless to stop a bell from ringing that is unless the clanger falls out. Perhaps that explains why this mask has ended up where it is. No mask can properly be described without reference to the clothing which went with it; the two are part and parcel of the one disguise. The dancer has to ensure that he is totally covered and cannot be taken for a human. Beneath the headdress he traditionally wears a pectoral or necklet of beads and cowries from which hang long strands of ram's hair terminating in a cowrie, interspersed with red parrot feathers. (African rams have hair much more like a goat's.) A tunic, painted with designs of triangles inside larger ones, fits tightly round the chest and waist but with long loose fitting sleeves. The hands are gloved and slippers are worn on the feet. A long embroidered raffia cloth is wound around the body from waist to ankles. It is held up by a belt tied with foliage from which hangs a bell. It sounds like a hot and clumsy costume to dance in, but African dance in some cases involves subtle and rhythmic little movements of parts of the body rather than great physical activity. 73 ----1 ~ Cosmetic box Central Africa, Zaire ]fakuba (the Kuba people) Wood Late 19th/20th century w. 26.0 cm UEA530 A Kuba Cosmetic Box The Kuba people from south-central Zaire are renowned for their skill in carving, weaving and beadwork. Their commemorative carvings of Kuba kings are some of the most naturalistic in Africa. Skilfully and beautifully decorated objects are associated with wealth, status and power. A wide range of domestic items are habitually embellished with careful decoration in traditional designs, particularly drinking cups, pots and boxes. Boxes like this were made for storing tukola; sometimes razors. Tukola is the name commonly used in much of Zaire for a cerise coloured powder obtained by grating species of camwood (pterocarpi). It is used as a base for cosmetics, as a dye and as a deterrent to termites, which will soon destroy anything made of wood; the destructive power of ants is one reason why so few wooden objects of any great age survive in the forest regions of Africa. The Bakuba used tukola to dye raffia doth, particularly for funeral costumes. The colour red is associated with death. It was quite common for tukola boxes to be made in this crescent shape; other shapes included baskets, huts, boats or any form which appealed to the artist's imagination. The crescent shape is said to refer to the half moon phase in the lunar cycle, traditionally the time of greatest fecundity in women. The top is decorated with cowrie-shaped eyes and a facial image reminiscent of some Kuba masks. Interlace patterns border the top with similar designs surrounding the sides of the box. The inside of the top is stained a cherry colour having been used to mix up the tukola powder. 75 Further reading Adams, M. 1978 Kuba Embroidered Cloth, in African Arts, Vol xii. Antubam, K. 1963 Ghana's Heritage of Culture, Leipzig, Kohler & Amelang. Bannerman, D.A. 1953 The Birds of West and Equatorial Africa, London, Oliver & Boyd. Carey, M. 1991 Beads and Beadwork of East and Central Africa, Shire Ethnography. Cole, and Ross, D.H. 1977 The Arts of Ghana, Los Angeles, University of California Press. Cornet, J. 1978 A Survey of Zairan Art, North Carolina Museum of Art. Cornet, J. 1982 Art Royal Kuba, Milan, Sipiel. Fagg, W. and List, H. 1963 Nigerian Images, London, Lund Humphries. Fischer, E. 1977 Dan Forest Spirits: Masks in Dan Villages, in African Arts Vol xi, November. Fischer, E. and Himrnelheber, H. 1976 The Art of the Dan, Zurich, Museum Rietburg. Laman, K. 1962 The Kongo (vol III) Studio Ethnographica Upsaliensa Upsala, Sweden. Lehuard, R. 1989 Art Bakongo, Les Centres de Style, Arnouville, Arts d'Afrique Noir. McLeod, M.D. 1981 The Asante, London, British Museum Publications. Neyt, F. 1981. Traditional Arts and History of Zaire, Basle, Societe d'Arts Prirn.itifs. Rattray, RS. 1924 & 1927 Religion and Art in Ashanti, Basel Mission & Oxford University Press. Vansina, J. 1964 Le Royaume Kuba, Tervuren, Musee Royale. Vansina, J. 1978 Children of Woot, University of Wisconsin. Verger-Fevre, M.N. 1993 Art of the Cote d'Ivoire, Geneva, Barbier Mueller Museum. Willett, F. 1971 African Art, London, Thames and Hudson. 76 Do ~New Ireland ••• ~lain D ~ ... inea New Georgia~ 0~ ~ ~roup "'~ •. .,, ""\\ ••. ~"\ OD ~ Solomon Islands 'u~ ~.. 0 t::J Santa Cruz Islands 15° s l> b 'l> ~ Vanuatu 0 \ 0 \ Fiji \) i) () ~:" New Caledonia Australia 400km p ACIFIC OCEAN Southwest Pacific Region 77 A Solomon Islands Figure Les Tickle Getting to know It was an agreed exercise in coming to This chapter presents a case-study, know; one which acknowledged that beginning from a single object in the most people seeing the figure (or any Collection, approaching the object in an other work of art) would have only their inquisitive way, and gathering addi own ideas and the evidence of the object tionalinformation to help to understand to work from in the first instance. It was it and the context from which it origi this kind of experience which the group nates. The object is a small figure from the Solomon Islands (UEA 173). The was having in relation to other pieces in inquisitive approach to it with which their children would have when they the chapter begins (the responses to it, came to the Gallery or encountered art interpretations of it, and the search to elsewhere. the Collection, and which they expected understand it) was adopted by a group of primary school teachers who were As teachers they knew that an impor previously unfamiliar with the object. tant point to the exercise was about the nature of teaching and learning. In par The teachers worked together in a group. ticular the relationship between enquiry, At first they had only the figure in the instruction, and the handling of infor glass case, the knowledge that it origi mation and interpretation of evidence nated in the Solomon Islands, and some from a range of sources was an impor experience of asking the kinds of ques tions suggested in Starting Points (Sekules tant consideration. For the purpose of and Tickle 1993). They knew that there with the previously unfamiliar figure was an entry relating to the figure in the Sainsbury Collection's draft catalogue, and they agreed that the first stage should be tape recorded. Notes were also made, as that a copy was available for consultation the group was asked to respond to and after the speculation session. They also knew that I had done personal research interpret the object without documen examining the nature of their encounter tary support or instruction. on the arts of the Solomon Islands, which Iwould share with them as a third layer of Photographic views of the object follow information after they'd considered the (the reader might start as the teachers did catalogue entry. before reading beyond this introduction). 78 UEA 173 79 UEA 173 were descriptions ofits technicalfeatures, in the sense of how sections of it were fixed to other sections; how it might have been made to be attached to something else; and how it functioned. These were associated with questions about what its function actually was. What it was used for and the way :in which it might have been used were sources of recurring specu lations. Some of the ideas which they expressed are then reported (which the reader could use to compare her/his ideas with). The catalogue entry is provided (so that the reader may add that layer of information in the same way ifs/he wishes to). Some further observations of the object are added, followed by information from personal research and secondary (docu mentary) sources. Possible interpretations based on that research layer are also of fered. Finally, further reading which can be used to add other interpretations and information is listed. The personality characteristics of the fig ure, and the feelings which it conveyed and invoked as a representation of some form of being, were also a part of the discussion. Quite what form of being it might represent was a central question in this. There were some tentative ideas about the location from which it came, the kind of person who might have made it, the people who inhabit the Solomon Islands, and the resources available to them for the production of objects such as this one. The figure Standing before the figure the group s 1 responses were characterised partly by a sense of excited puzzlement - as if there might be a prize for making the best sense of the object, or a time-limit for asking questions and getting dues, like a quiz game. There was also quiet contemplation - as if searching for pre vious mental schemata from which to make sense of it, wondering what ques tions to ask of the evidence before them. The questions in Starting Points seemed to offer some help, but there were also some assumptions, displayed in the questions which members of the group asked, which seemed to be about the The questions and comments didn't flow in any kind of order, and speculations about a technical feature led to ques tions about function, and on to the feel ings the figure invoked, in a to-and-fro of ideas. In the sections of audio-tape transcript which follow I have grouped these ideas, for the sake of order, ac human purposes behind the making of objects of this kind. cording to the predominant topics of conversation which emerged as the Speculations began to unfold around matterssuchaswhatthefigureismadeof; how it was made; and by whom. There group inspected the figure and thought out loud. But it will be evident that the to-and-fro of conversation makes neat separation impossible. 81 Representation grinder for food; a figure for the front of there's another face underneath, look, it's holding another face in its hands, or its paws, or its ... they're hands isn't it a skull? is that a skull? is it a skull? is it a human figure? is it a human face, or apelike? I think it's meant to be human it's either that or it's caring for something, protecting something, is it religious? a great god with a little man underneath? a canoe which glides along the water) is it friendly looking? it's not frightening do you think its protective or is it offering something? do you know what I mean? it's got a sort of protecting ... to me it looks protecting it doesn't look aggressive does it? (other ideas included that :it could rep Making resent the head of a chief; that it was well it's made ofwood and it's inlaid with ... what would that be? shell? abalone type, is it abalone? something like that it's carved from a solid piece do they have any trees? is it in one piece? it must be carved if it's in one piece that bit could be separate underneath (the smoothness) could be its age its rounded nicely isn't it? unless that is age it could be (made smooth with) a piece of blade or knife; how would they have got the pieces of shell to stick on? is it inlaid? is it inlaid or stuck on the surface? I can't see it looks as if it's stuck on the surface ... oh no, there's a piece missing there, the piece by the bottom, yes it is inlaid which means they must have got a minute tool to have done that; it's very fine work isn't it? Personal characteristics stylised; and a question about why the jaw was distorted). Purpose (perhaps it's) agood luck charm or to frighten something away to ward off evil spirits it could be some kind of fertility thing, because of the small piece at the bottom (the smaller head) it could be used for a tribal ceremony not necessarily religious, couldn't it ... it could have been just warding off evil, or ... spirits it doesn't look as though it would ward off.. no it doesn't ... no (other ideas included that it could be a religious icon for ceremonial purposes, a spearhead; a jartop or stopper; a 82 Technical features ... to the back ofthe head? I think that's quite interesting, do you see what I mean? the jaw? ... the jawline? that could slot onto something somebody said the prow of a boat unless of course they used string to go through that bit to tie it onto a staff a staff, yes 'cause they wouldn't have had nails would they, perhaps not, so they might have used some kind of staff to lash it onto, a staff or some kind of religious ... mmmm at the back of it, on that vertical piece there ... there are three holes ... do they go right through? yes, yes they do. I can see right through it it's almost like ... made for the purpose of fixing on to something else, but what? maybe a boat would have that at the front, but it doesn't look big enough it doesn't look big enough to go on the front of a boat to me no, no . . . look, it looks as if that's been snapped off something at the side, you can see the marks in the wood its brain seems to be well represented, its head yes, it's like it's a separate thing, as if you can lift it up is it made in two pieces then? look at it from the side, you can see a lot from the side it could be that the top bit could be made (separately) because ofthe wood or whatever it's made from, it'd be terribly hard to ... oh no, it's not stuck on is it? you can see in there, you can see where it comes out, it's not stuck onto it at all there's kind of a top, a skull cap, from a distance, from over there it looked as if it was stuck on but it's not the one (small figure) at the bottom has got the same ridge round the head, so its obvi ously to do with the way they see the shapes I don't know what it could go on, a staff, or, but if it does fix to something, something has got to go through that way or that way, its going to fix sideways onto something the base ofthe chin is at a right angle isn't it? People who are the 'they' that you are referring to? the people in the Solomon Isles, the artist somebody with clever hands (laughter) he must have been a bit special, with that inlay they might have just done the wooden part they were quite skilled weren't they? it could depend on what it was made for, like if it was a religious piece of work it could be made by a religious character Puzzling The questions: are there many trees in the Solomon Islands?, and do they have glue? were also asked. Indeed, the number of questions asked, and the number of speculations brought to bear on the object, in attempts to interpret the vis ible evidence and understand it, were matched by only one or two firm com mitments. The conversation was char acterised by a real sense of puzzling. This was mainly based on interpreta tions of the information available in the 83 object itself. But it also included a search protruding slightly when viewed from the side. Both ears appear to be broken at the same places. Below them, attached for possibilities about the purpose of an object from a place and people unknown to the group, and the ways in which it is (or was) used. The speculations seemed to the head, are concave shapes. At the base of the shapes, by the jawline, they terminate with broken wood similar to the breaks on the ears. Could these be part of what was an open disc? I suspect so, and will say why later. But first let me turn to the second stage of the exer cise which was to consider the evidence of the catalogue entry. to be guided by some general ideas about the possible uses of figurative art ob jects such as this one within cultural groups in general. Those possibilities seemed to be focused on representa tions of deities, and the power of talis mans to protect people. Different ideas about how the object might have been used competed for the label 'correct'. The entry is reproduced below to pro vide the reader with exactly what the group then had available. The informa tion in it was regarded as an extension to the evidence available in the figure itself, and as an aid to interpreting and understanding it. However, that infor mation is provided within the conven tions of such catalogues - i.e. the need for abbreviation in order to accommo date all objects in a collection; an as But speculation about the makers and users, and theirplaceandlifewerevague or nonexistent. Other observations On dose scrutiny of the figure it is clear that it is made from wood, especially from the grain that is detectable where the ears have been broken. The wood is burnished, and deep reddish brown. But in the curve of the arm a thick layer ofblacklacquer-likematerialisevident. It looks like a residue from more exten sive covering of the figure, since there are traces of black also around the eyes and mouth, as weH as patchily across the surface of the face. There are what appear to be file marks across the top, rounded shape of the head. Marks on the arms suggest either gouging by cut ting tools, or damage during use. sumption of some prior knowledge which might have brought the reader to consider the entry; and the use of schol arly style and sources for acknowledg ing the information and connecting it to wider references in the community of scholarship. In short, each entry is part of an extensive, scholarly catalogue deal ing with a large collection of art objects, intended to provide an abbreviated ac count. The nose septum is pierced. Its lips are especially thin, and leave the small teeth 84 Catalogue entry Solomon Islands, Roviana Region Canoe figurehead 19th century Wood, pearl shell h. 6 1/2 in (16.5 cm) Acquired 1967 UEA 173 Canoes in the Pacific region were often decorated and elaborated far beyond the basic requirements of technical efficiency, for they were great ritual vehicles, used for important enterprises like ceremonial exchanges, fishing and war expeditions. The success of any enterprise was dependent upon divine favour, and many of the carvings on canoes, like this figurehead, referred to tutelary spirits, who protected the occupants and acted malevolently towards an enemy. In the Roviana (New Georgia) area the local plank-built canoes were elaborately decorated with carvings and shell inlay (see Starzecka and Cranstone, 1974: 29, 41). Close to the waterline, beneath the prow, was attached a figurehead of this type, which Somerville (1897: 371) stated was "to keep off the kesoko or water fiends which might otherwise cause the winds and waves to upset the canoe". These images, known as musumusu or nguzunguzu, usually have prognathous features and arms which reach forwards, sometimes holding a small head, as here, which may refer to a headhunting trophy. Waite (1984) has suggested that figureheads with a pointed head date from the 1880s, while those with a rounded head, as is the case here, may be earlier. The large-lobed ears are damaged and some shell inlay is missing from the main face and the eyes of the small head; the nasal septum is pierced and there are three square holes at the back of the head for attachment to the canoe hull. Using the catalogue entry The catalogue entry starts with a coun try of origin and particular geographi cal location within the country, followed by a statement of what the figure is and the century in which it was made. It later locates the Roviana Region in New Georgia, and the Solomon Islands in the Pacific. References to the general place and worship. The material from which the figure was made is rather simply stated, and we are told that it was carved and the shell inlaid. The focus of its context narrows to plank-built canoes of Roviana; to the way in which they were used; and why. A description of of canoes in the Pacific region sets a context for what the figure is, with refer ences to decorative and elaborative the figure in the Sainsbury Collection coupled with interpretations about other objects of its type is also provided. objects associated with ceremonial, war 85 30km Vella Lavena go S ~pare New Georgia Islands 86 Our group had begun the other way round. When they read the entry it was used to look for links with what had been said while looking at the figure, to information1 and in doing so raises ad ditional questions1 especially about the context in which the figure would have originated, such as what are tutelary spirits? (guardians or protectors); what is a headhunting trophy and what was the nature of headhunting?; who were the canoe occupants?; who were the enemy?; what was the nature of their belief in spirits and fiends?; what were plank-built canoes with elaborate deco ration like? It tells us that one theory has one style of these heads dated in the 1880s, with this one possibly earlier1 raising questions about how common such figures were/ are; over what fill in pieces in the speculative puzzle. The catalogue entry gave approval to 1 or confirmed, some of the speculations and observations made by the group. It adds other observers' information1 interpre tations and speculations, and gives the sources, providing a degree of authori tativeness about the interpretations. The ideas that the figure was carved from wood and inlaid with shell; fixed to a boat; glided along; was protective; in tended to bring good luck and ward off evil; connected with ceremony; and carries a small head - probably human, were all supported by the catalogue information. period of time they were made; whether different styles evolved over time; or whether different styles were made by different artists or by different groups of carvers in specific localities. It makes no mention of the origin of the particu lar being which the figure represents, or of the image itself which came to repre sent that being. It did not approve other ideas which had been proposed in the group1 and nar rowed down the possible interpretations of the figure which the group had en gaged with: for example1 that it might be a spearhead or domestic implement; or a Roviana great god with a little man beneath. But it leaves some questions unanswered and some puzzling intact, such as how was the figure carved? how was the shell inlaid? how and why was the wood so black ened? how was it fixed to a canoe? who made it (was it necessarily a man)? why is Some of these questions were always likely to remain speculative or unan swered as the group proceeded to the next layer of information. Adopting a middle path between the figurehead in the glass case and the catalogue' s start ing point about canoes in the Pacific the jawline distorted? is it friendly and region, I will present that layer to the reader in the form of imagery and infor mation about the Roviana Lagoon and its people in the recent past. The protective, or frightening? The catalogue entry also adds other 87 intention is to extend the realm of inter pretation of the figurehead by placing it in a context as I see it - that is, as an interested guest of the Solomon Islands people for five years during the late 1960s and early 1970s, who has also style. The village is shaded by coconut trees, reaching high into the blue sky, rustled by gentle, cooling breezes from the sea. Around the village are banana and pawpaw trees, and gardens with sweet potato, cassava, taro, and yams. made use of documentary sources from earlier visitors to the Islands. The gardens are cut as clearings from jungle which yields fresh water for drinking and bathing; timber, sago palm, and vines for house-building; many kinds of nuts and fruits as food supple ments; and timber for canoe-making. The jungle stretches back and up into mountainous terrain to the north. Inter Imagine a village of a few hundred peo ple, with houses built of sago-palm leaves, set at the edge of the tropical New Georgia Island and stretching down to the shores of the Roviana Lagoon. The villagers are black skinned. Very black, satin, skin, with handsome fine-featured faces and tightly curled dark hair, worn in a rounded bushy mittently the hot sun is interrupted by heavy tropical downpours of rain, leav ing the air constantly humid and the ground moist. A Solomons Village 88 In the other direction the coconut palms Neighbouring villages in the lagoon, as reach out over the beach, which is white well as mission stations and schools, are from the fragments of bleached dead easily accessible by canoe, more speed coral that form it. The water is shallow, ily since outboard motors became avail and brightly reflects the sunny blue sky. able. Munda, never more than a few The view across its tranquil surface is to hours away, has a harbour for trading reefs which enclose the lagoon and pro vessels, an international airport, trade tect it from the outer ocean; to other stores, a large hospital and administra islands, some small and uninhabited tive offices for the churches and standing aloft the reefs; others large government. Other villages inland are enough to support village communi accessible by foot. ties. These smaller islands also make up the outer edges of the lagoon, providing The past century extensive, shallow and usually calm The people of the village and these is fishing grounds, abundant with fish, lands have been called Melanesians by shellfish and other food resources. The Europeans (from the Greek melos- black) largest neighbouring island is also in because of their very dark skin colour. view: Rendova to the south, reaching The name Melanesia has been given to high out of the sea. the general area of the Western Pacific, including parts of New Guinea, the A crescent-shaped bay within which Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, and New the lagoon is formed is enclosed on the Caledonia. east, north and west by the mountain ous, jungle-dad and fertile island, New Europeans have been in regular contact Georgia. The island is the largest (ap with the people of Roviana since the late proximately 50 miles [SO kilometres] nineteenth and early twentieth century. long and 20 miles [32 kilometres] wide) (European ships had visited in 1568, in the New Georgia Group of a dozen or around 1600, and then between 1767 so main islands and hundreds of tiny and 1826). Between 1850 and 1900 whal minor ones. The group is in the Western ing ships visited, traders and coconut Solomons, eight degrees south of the planters settled, and sugar planters from equator and about a thousand miles Queensland and Fiji raided the villages northeast of the Great Barrier Reef. to take people both voluntarily and by Lower lying coastal parts of the Islands force to their plantations. Christian mis have been developed as coconut sionaries came to teach the gospel, to plantations. Commercial logging has establish hospitals and schools, and to developed in parts where deep-water take Solomon Islanders overseas for harbouring is possible. training. 89 anthropological study, missionary ac counts, film-making and photographs. It is from these that we have a sense of From 1893 the New Georgia islands were deemed by the British to be part of the protectorate of the Solomon Islands, and the people subject to British laws the previous context of the canoe prow figurehead (presuming that the way of life, the traditional practices, and the oral accounts of the people provided accurate reflections). and rule. In 1941 the Japanese expan sion into the Pacific, quickly followed by American and Allied opposition, brought dramatic invasion and counter-invasion to New Georgia (J.F. Kennedy'sP.T. boat was torpedoed at Plum Pudding Island near Gizo and Canoes in daily life Some basic factors have not changed. Village life is based on growing vegeta bles (cassava, taro, yams and sweet potato especially); on growing or gath ering fruits and nuts (bananas and coconuts in particular); and on fishing and gathering shellfish. Canoes are essential in the village. They are the main form of communication among a scattering of islands. Even within one island it is often easier to go on water than to walk through tropical, moun he was saved from Japanese capture by villagers who hid him in the bottom of their canoe). In the postwar period fundamental changes to the economy and political structures occurred. Communications with more distant places through radio and air transportation; the commercial production of coconuts for vegetable oil; the availability of trade goods such as outboard motors; increased mission activities; the exploitation of forest re tainous jungle terrain. Canoes are used for fishing, for visiting relatives .in other villages, for trade along the coastline and for entertainment (small lightweight sources by international companies; and greater government interest in fishing, forestry, mining, agriculture, health, and education, all occurred prior to the Solomon Islands becoming an inde racing canoes are made specially for children). pendent republic within the British The land provides a plentiful supply of Commonwealth in 1978. timber and other natural materials for making them, and for buildings and the manufacture of other art objects - vines for baskets and for binding and stitch ing building materials; and tita nut for During this century of change, records of aspects of the way of life of the people of New Georgia as it was before these events, or which in part contin ued through them, have been made making a sticky, putty-like filler and glue used for waterproofing canoes and for fixing shell inlay decoration into through the collection of objects, 90 human, which had only ever resided in carvings. The sea has a plentiful supply of cowrie, mother of pearls and nautilus shell for decorative purposes. the supernatural world, and those which were venerated ancestors. Within that world and that connection with daily life mana was a central feature. Tools for building work and making canoes and carvings are now imported -steel blades for axes, adzes, and knives; The nature of mana is difficult to convey. Its meaning may vary from place to place, and has been variously interpreted by anthropologists and linguists. H is possible to think of it as a force, or as a state related to quality of action. saws; and files and sandpaper for shaping and smoothing. The first iron tools were traded in the early 1800's by whalers in exchange for food and turtle shell. The land and the sea previously provided the tools and materials of manufacture - stone and shell for adze Mana ... carried meanings of efficacy, po tency, success, realization, luck (with the assumption that these entailed both support or activation by ancestors or gods and proper human performance and skill) . . . people could be spoken ofas "having mana-ness "or "being mana" ... as a verb (it meant) sup port, protect, empower ... mana-ize (us) ... as an invocation in prayer or magic it was like 'Amen'. blades and scrapers; wood shafts for holding the blades and vines for bind ing them; sharks teeth for drilling and fine cutting; sharkskin and the leaf of the 'sandpaper tree' for smoothing. Mana The life of the village in pre-Christian times was closely connected with the supernatural, which influenced the nat ural world and daily events. Preoccupa tions included the worship of ancestors, a common feature of Melanesian society throughout the region. In the Western Solomons, including Choiseul, the Shortland Islands and the New Georgia Group, ancestor worship was closely related to the belief that the head contains the life-power of a human. (Keesing 1984 page 140) Mana derived from the spirits, but could Belief in a world of spirits and deities which influence daily human activities also exist in people and objects, includ ing especially the bones of revered an cestors. It was a beneficial quality with which men or objects like canoes, tools, and weapons could be infused. Mana was necessary to bring success in activi ties such as gardening, and good luck in events such as fighting. Its presence was thought to be responsible for good crops, and for success in war. So to have or to was also commonplace. Spirits were of two main kinds, those which were never be mana, to have objects which had or were mana was an important quest. 91 In men mana was believed to reside, or Among Headhunters in 1890, and photo graphed canoes and canoe houses in the villages. What was very evident to visi tors were the sacred places close to Roviana villages, with their heaps of skulls. These were still in evidence and still revered places even into the second half of the twentieth century. at least be concentrated, in the head. The skulls of venerated ancestors - those who themselves had been thought to have or be mana - were revered. In New Georgia carved effigies of ancestors were made, and in some cases their skulls were over modelled with paste, deco rated with shell inlay, and coloured black. The scale and ferocity of raids for headhunting and the capture of slaves, mounted on neighbouring islands, is said to have increased greatly between 1880 and 1900. Local chiefs ('big men') The practice of warfare was based on the aim of capturing human heads. Headhunting raids for this purpose were commonly launched in the Roviana and Marovo Lagoons of New Georgia, as well as neighbouring Choiseul and the Shortland Islands. Expeditions were mounted in large canoes, known in New Georgia as tomoko. The raids might cover a hundred miles, into the islands of Santa Isabel and Guadalcanal. Mana was an increased their power and prestige through the acquisition of wealth by controlling trade relations with European traders. Iron tools and weap ons, including guns and ammunition, tobacco, cloth, and other products, introduced in small numbers by whal ers in exchange for food and turtleshell, were now traded in quantity for dried coconuts (copra) used for palm oil, tur tle shell and beche-de-mer (an edible sea slug). important quality invoked for these expeditions. European visitors in the second half of the nineteenth century reported the phe nomenon of headhunting in their ships logs, diaries, and missionary accounts, though some of that was second-hand reporting rather than as first-hand wit nesses! A visit by a Captain Cheyne to Simbo Island :in 1844 recorded witness ing the return of a raid with ninety-three heads of men, women and children. Charles Woodford, who became the first British administrator of the protector ate, recorded his story A Naturalist Increased wealth brought greater opportunities to lead large raids, which in turn, if successful, generated more mana and prestige. Success was the more assured because of the new weapons. Hingava, a chief at Munda, used axe heads mounted on long handles as the perfect weapon for headhunting. In 1894, jointly with allied chiefs and with help from traders, he raided Choiseul Island with five hundred men in twenty-two canoes and two 92 English-built boats, carrying up to four hundred rifles and five-thousand rounds of ammunition (Bennett 1987). ing. Skilled canoe makers were highly respected, and would lead the activi ties. The work began by carefully select ing species of light, straight-grained trees, which were felled and the planks cut in situ in the forest, so that they could be carried to the shore. Cutting and shaping the central planks using an adze was the next stage. The planks were sewn together with Zaya vine, passed through holes bored or burned into their edges. Stem and stern were shaped, stitched, and joined to the base in simi Such places were not safe for Europeans either. With increased colonial interests in exploiting natural resources, particu larly by acquiring land for coconut plantations, and to ensure protection of labour supplies both from within the Islands and from German and French colonists in the Pacific region, Woodford set about to pacify the islanders, largely by force. At the same time Christian missions were established, not least in lar ways, followed by bracing, straight ening, and addition of the sides to align the canoe correctly. those places which had been subjected to headhunting, but also among those responsible for the raiding. Chiefs made pacts with traders, administrators, and Construction was a cooperative activ ity, with a large number of villagers missionaries, and sought to join in on white men's powers. By 1906 when Hingava died the prestige of the big men and their powers gained from the old beliefs and activities were also more using the loya vines to align the planks. Caulking was done with the crushed or less dead. The outside of the canoe was charred to harden the timber, and was also made Pride and prowess in carving continued to be applied to domestic canoes, and in a redirection towards the production of objects for sale. Larger canoes were produced for peaceful celebration. black from a mixture of carbon and putty-nut. Strengthening from the inside was done by lashing carefully chosen, shaped pieces of tree root as thwarts along the gunwales. l'hese also provided seats for the occupants. fruit of the tita or putty-nut tree (Parinarium glaberrium) being forced into the cracks with a stick and left to dry. Tomoko The largest of these fast, light, plank built canoes was as long as sixty feet and carried thirty warriors or more. It was the pride of the village, and a great deal of communal effort went into its mak 93 Tomoko on display in 1969 94 Nguzunguzu Tomokos were extensively and intricately were made from stone and from shells, in varying sizes. Surfaces were smoothed with sharkskin, or with the leaf of the 'sandpaper tree' (Ficus storkii). Grooves into which the shell could be inlaid were cut with small, sharp pieces of shell or possibly sharks teeth. More recently (i.e. since European traders arrived in the firsthalf ofthenineteenthcentury) axes, metal blades set in a carved adze handle, tradestore rasps, knives, pieces of glass and sandpaper have been used for the various technical operations. decorated by inlaying shell into the tim ber, and by attaching feathers and white cowrie shells, following the visual lines of the prow and stern. Woodford described the rich decoration of shell inlay and added ornaments, of which the most complicated is the ladderlike facing of the prow with its rows of Ovulum shells. On the top of the prow are two small images of human figures looking out fore and aft, and a larger figure head near the water line. At the top of the stern there are two faces looking out to starboard and port. Thus watch is kept in every direction. The white arms on each side of the canoe indicate that heads have been taken. These appear to be painted after a successful raid. '(Woodford 1890). The distinctive inlay was usually made from nautilus shell, which is easy to cut, thin (needing a shallow groove) and providing plenty of flat, pearly areas from which to cut the pieces. It used to be cut with a vine, but more recently a hacksaw blade replaced that. Long narrow grooves provide alignments of small pieces of shell. The pieces are each cut to distinctive decorative, abstract shapes, which are embedded into the same kind of crushed, sticky putty nut as is used for the canoe caulking. The The making and then the fitting of the larger figurehead near the water line, the nguzunguzu, saw the completion of the canoe: Low down on the prow above the water line the head and shoulders of a nguzunguzu is suspended; it is so placed as to dip in the water in front of the canoe. The function of this nguzunguzu is to keep offthe Kesoka, or water fiends, which might otherwise cause the winds and waves to overset the canoe, so that they might fall on and devour its crew. wood could be blackened by charring and/ or by mixing carbon with the paste of the putty nut. After attaching the figurehead the canoe was left for several months to allow the caulking to harden, before being used in its first raid on another village. At this stage the role of mana was crucial. It is thought that the canoe (Somerville 1897, see Note 1) The figurehead was cut and shaped with an adze from a single piece of timber. Prior to the availability of metal, blades 95 prow figure itself and the canoe in Further interpretation general had to be inaugurated by mount ing a successful headhunting raid. To achieve that, perhaps they needed to be infused with mana first. In any case, nguzunguzu were believed to be charged with protective power, to ensure safe passage for the canoes across the shal low reef waters, and through the open seas. They were believed to protect against sea sprites too, ensuring success in the journeys and hence in the chance of capturing heads and returning to the villages with them, and more mana. There are many examples of nguzun guzu in museums, collected by visitors mainly during the period from 1850, suggesting that tomoko and headhunting were commonplace. Each figurehead had :its own distinctive character, within stylistic conventions. These conventions included a projecting jawline and nose. Forward nostrils, pierced septum, and prominent lips are also characteristic. Outstretched arms and hands holding either a small head or bird are usual. Large-lobed ears often with an inserted disc, or with a disc space, are also very common. Shell inlay eyes and decora tive markings which follow the carved lines of the eyebrows, cheeks, and jaw are distinctive to the figures, as is the fixing segment behind the head. The wood is usually blackened. In recent times (post 1970) a search for national unity for the Solomon Islands was accompanied by assertions of regional identity. The nguzunguzu image became a symbol of the Western Solomons. Canoe houses One of the problems of interpretation of the nguzunguzu comes from studying some of these figures, including the one in the Sainsbury Collection, and other objects from New Georgia, in the light of what is known about their original social context and other art objects made in the villages of New Georgia. There are many descriptions of the figures as protector spirits. Yet it is difficult to find myths or legends associated with this spirit, or reference to its origins (see Note 2). So let's return to the speculations The importance of the tomoko as a cen tral instrument in the life of the villages was reflected in the architecture of the canoe houses in which they were kept between raids. The timber-framed struc tures with steeply pitched roofs, dad with palm-leaf panels, were the largest buildings in the villages. A large rectan gular doorway, reaching the height of the side walls, was located in the gable end of the canoe house. Above the door way a slot or slots extended upwards into the gable itself, allowing the high prow and stern of the vessel to slide of the group of teachers about the range of possible interpretations of the evidence. In particular they were curious through. 96 about nguzunguzu as a deity or protector. Their ideas began to delve into the nature of the deity as an anthropomorphic figure - that is, one which resembles human form, or which results from attributing characteristics of human form to a deity. This and other similar figures hold the possibility ofrepresenting human charac teristics. It is likely that, as with some other nguzunguzu, this one had disc shaped ear lobes. (If so and they projected at right angles to the cheeks as it appears they would have; and given the weakness of cross-grain in narrow carving; and knowing the location of the figure when attached to the prow, one might not be surprised that they became damaged). The stretching of ear lobes and wearing of plugs in them was a common practice in Roviana and elsewhere in Melanesia. Piercing of the septum and wearing of nose bones or other decorative objects was also commonplace. There were some interpretations which the group seem to have been imposing. For example, the gesture of the arms and contents of the hands as one of making an offering, or perhaps of safe guarding a more vulnerable being. The relative size of the small head which it holds makes it difficult to see the figure as human representation - if one pre sumes that smaller head to be human. And that is what has often been as sumed - that the head in the hands Yet some of the features of the figure counteract these possibilities. The proportion of arms to head and ears, for example, are distinctly not human. Full figure representations of ancestors from the same region had more naturalistic proportions. Might it be that the nguzun guzu proportions, and the fact that they have no body below shoulder level, the concept of power residing in the head? Or is it a stylistic option which developed because of the purpose, location, and use of a figure which would be vulnerable to damage on the reefs? Connecting the hands or smaller figure to the underside of the chin certainly makes technical sense for strengthening otherwise vulnerable limbs. Another possibility is that in its original conception the canoe hull is the body of the figure. represents a trophy from a raid. Or is it possible that the relative sizes of the two heads was associated with mana; that the smaller one was intended to sym bolise the vulnerability of an enemy, to represent a trophy of war physically dominated by the raiding power? Given the information which has now been offered it :is possible to ask: where in the realm of representation does the figure lie among the remodelling of ancestral skulls, the carved represent ations of ancestors, and the represent ations of a Being which was never human? This is an interesting question which might extend those with which we began as a group, standing before the figure in the Collection. 97 Canoe prnw figure (see Bousnoure 1993 p180) Portrait of a Roviana man (based on photograph in Waite 1983) These possibilities return us to the realm by a group of teachers. Ideas were first of speculations - more informed by based on dose observation of the evi layers of information, yet continuing to dence, coupled with aesthetic responses consider a range of possible interpreta about the emotional effects of the char tions of the nature, purpose, use and acter and its stylistic feature, and draw design of the figurehead, its physical ing on previous experience of art objects characteristics and our responses to and conjecture about their purposes. them, and its technical qualities and Connecting new impressions of an un features. Further layers may be gained from other sources listed below, and familiar object with personal reactions this particular figure may be seen as one piece of evidence of an artistic culture an image and its purposes, suggests to it, and with the possible meanings of how complicated the problem of under standing that art object is. which was distinctive and localised within Melanesia. The second layer of information, from Becoming info:rmed the catalogue entry, helped to translate I have tried to show how, initially, the some of the speculations into a more evidence which was found in a single object, the canoe prow figure, stimu communal kind of knowledge, with evidence from other sources confirm lated speculations and interpretations ing some of the first impressions 98 and being confident about personal re sponses. These are important principles in the study of art objects. expressed by members of the group. Information from the catalogue also opened up new questions about the ob ject and its origins. The aesthetic re sponses i.e. feelings for the image (or caused by it) and reflection about their own feelings, as well as appreciation of human artistry, remained largely per Notes 1: Somerville gives the name as Totoishu, the name used for the figure in the Marovo Lagoon area of New Georgia. sonal. 2: Haddon and Hornell 1936, page 107, cite a report that for the people of Ranongga the head represents agood spirit that used to live in the mountains. A third set of ideas added background to the immediate experiences of response and interpretation, in the informative sense of getting to know something about the geographical, historical and social context from which the figure head derived. These sources of knowl edge extended the experience of com ing to understand from persistent atten tion to the concrete detail of the object, and personal responses to it, into the realm of speculations about the nature and purposes of artists' work and art objects in particular communities. Further reading Allen, A., House, B., O'Brien, C. and Tickle, L. 1974 Images and Islands, Suva, Fiji, UNESCO. Allen, A., Craven, A., House, B., Keleirnae, A., O'Brien, C. and Tickle, L. 1978 The Grass Roots Art of The Solomons, Sydney, Pacific Publications. Bennett, J.A. 1987 Wealth of The Solomons: a history ofa Pacific Archipelago 1800-1978, Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press. The gradual accumulation of different kinds of experiences and layers of infor mation affected a return to nguzunguzu. Working in that way also affected the experience of other objects. It shows, too, the possibilities of extending un derstanding through further research. What became clear is that the whole, accumulating experience included the discipline of attending to the detail; the securing of information; maintaining an open mind to speculations, living comfortably with what is not known, Bousnoure, V. 1993 Visions D'Oceanie, Paris, Musee Dapper. Brake, B., McNeish, J. and Simmons, D. 1979 Art of the Pacific, Oxford, Oxford University Press. Cranstone, B.A.L.1961 Melanesia: A Short Ethnography, London, British Museum. Czarkowska Starzecka, D. and Cranstone, B.A.L. 1974 The Solomon Is landers, London, British Museum. 99 Gathercole,P.,Kaeppler,A.L.,andNew ton, D. 1979 The Art of The Pacific Islands, Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art. Guppy, H.B. 1887 The Solomon Islands and Their Natives, London, Swan Sonnenschein, Lowry and Co. Haddon, A.C. and Hornell, J. 1975 Ca noes ofOceania, Hawaii, Bishop Museum Press. Keesing, RM. 1984 'Rethinking Mana' in Anthropological Research 40, 1, pp137 156. Sekules, V. and Tickle, L (Eds) 1993 Starting Points, Norwich, UEA Centre for Applied Research in Visual Arts Education. Somerville, B.T. 1897 Ethnographical Notes inNew Georgia, Solomon Islands, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Insti tute, Vol 26 pages 357-412. Waite, D. 1983 Art of the Solomon Islands from the collection of the Barbier-Muller Museum, Geneva, Musee Barbier Miiller. Waite, D. 1987 Artefacts from The Solo mon Islands in the Julius Brenchley Collec tion, London, British Museum. Woodford,C.M.1890ANaturalistAmong the Headhunters, London, Philip and Son. 100 ') ~ OntongJava " Sikaiana Guadalcanal D Ulawa 10° s Reef Is. ~J),fakira Bellona Duff Is. Nendo 0 Utupua 0 ~ (~ Anuta 0 ~Vanikolo *" Fataka 0 e SANTA CRUZ ISLANDS Tikopia Rennell 200km Eastern Solomons 101 Eastern Solomons Body Ornaments Les Tickle UEA871 102 Impressions Observation and the inquisitive stance towards another previously unfamiliar object (UEA 871) provided the same group of teachers with evidence of a large (15 centimetres or so), off-white disc of thick (about 0.5cm) hard mate rial, the surface and edge of which are smooth. There was immediate recogni tion of this as some kind of shell. Mark ings on the surface show fine, curvy striations and brown blotches. The latter look like staining. The shape and finish of the disc suggest that it is manu factured by a skilled craftworker. The group was intrigued by the brown turtleshell overlay design: what's the black? is the black leather? the black? it looks like a darker shell a darker shell? what kind sea shell ... (laughter from the group) I think that's a tortoise shell turtle shell it looked like leather yes it did A search for meaning in terms of what the design might represent followed the eventual accurate recognition of the material, and re-evaluation of its colour (from black to brown). The large em blem-like shape at the bottom, of possi bly a stylised bird form with forked tail and swept back wings, was especially noticed. A fish shape above the bird was also picked out quickly. Above the fish two sloping shapes link the figure to a rising column of open fretwork, protruding symmetrically from either side of a central column, and resem bling the tail ends of fish. The final, top shape is without 'tails' and left solid: what does it represent? I think its a bird what's the zig zag? a net? a fishing net? fish bone, fishbone or nets well that's the backbone of the fish is it? could be, could be isn't the front bit ... it looks like a stick to me ... There was a suggestion that this might also represent a human figure, its vertical stance suggesting an anthro pomorphic figure of body, shoulders, arms and legs. The neck of the figure is surmounted by a stylised fish shape in place of a head and beak, the tail of the fish at the left. There was a suggestion that this represents a synthesis of human and fish: it's quite like a (human) figure though I thought that wouldn't a fish be horizontal, you know, it's vertical which suggests a human figure it could be some sort of synthesis couldn't it? fish and man, you know? it's like a head at the top isn't it? legs at the bottom Plaited fibre is tied in front of the central column. Woven in and out of the fret work in places, it is threaded through 103 the column and the disc above the bird/ fish, rising up behind the disc, and tied of information. They wanted to know 'can we read now?' The reading of entries at the top. for this and a similar object in the Re serve Collection .(UEA 745) brought in stant reaction: This fine string is joined at the top to a long, softer, more openly plaited thong which is tied together at its ends. The purpose of the fibre seemed readily identifiable: what are those on the front? maybe they tie it round the backas anecklace that's the fixing part of it and this front bit that goes straight down the front? yes it is; there are two holes, ahole ... it goes through does it? it's a bird, a sea bird, it's caught a fish' so it is actually a synthesis of two, a fish and a bird, frigate bird gives fishermen prowess, that comes across doesn't it, because of the strength of the object Recognition of the purpose of the object followed in part from this, and in part from glancing at catalogue information. At first it was seen as a good luck charm, but then: it's a breast plate, possibly protective, possi bly decorative, made from shell From this evidence the speculations and interpretations-the excitement of guess ing exclaimed by the group - seemed in part accurate and certainly open minded. Some referred to the catalogue entry and began to feed in some information to the group. Some said it's actually more fun looking at it and guessing than when you read the information from the catalogue. Others agreed: yes, yes, it is, it (reading) spoils it!' This was not everyone's experience, though, and some people were frustrated by the lack 1 104 Photo UEA 745 105 Catalogue entry Santa Cruz Breast ornament 19th/20th century Clam shell, turtle shell, fibre (UEA 871) cloth (UEA 745) diam 6.5 in (16.5cm) (UEA 871) 6in (15.2 cm) (UEA 745) Acquired 1983 (UEA 871) 1980 (UEA 745) 1. This (UEA 745) distinctive form ofbreast ornament, locally called tema, was worn by men suspended round the neck on a cord, which in this case is made of twisted cloth (see Koch, 1971: pls 15-16 for photographs of men in full ceremonial costume). The pendant is composed of two main parts; a white disc ground from the hinge section of a large clam shell (Tridacna gigas) and pierced through the centre, to which is fitted afiligree overlay carved in turtle shell obtained from the hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata). The turtle shell designs on tema usually show the silhouette of a frigate bird with angled wings and forked tail, above which are a series of triangular elements, generally interpreted as fish (see Beasley, 1939, for a variety of designs). As in the neighbouring Solomon Islands (see nos. UEA 833 and 755), the frigate bird is associated with fishing prowess, strength and endurance. 2. In this example (UEA 871) ofthe tema breast ornament the head ofthe frigate bird takes the form of a fish, with seven further double fishlike elements above. Many tema are localised to the Graciosa Bay area of Nidu Island (also known as Ndende or Santa Cruz Island), but it is not clear where they were made, since red feathers, canoes and other valuables circulated throughout the group as part of an extensive exchange network (see Davenport 1962: 96-7). Both examples illustrated here most probably date to the first part of the twentieth century, though the clam shell discs may be older, and make an interesting comparison in technique; the craftsman who carved the turtle shell on this example having a much more fluent style. Provenance: Collected in 1983 from Ebol Japusa, Lwepe village, Graciosa Bay, Nidu Island. 106 Tema in context The information provided in the cata logue on the Santa Cruz breast orna ments steers us further (i.e. following the chapter A Solomon Islands Figure) into a world where the sea is notably the main coating of the earth. It is a world of canoes, trading between islands, crafts men, fish, birds, turtles, clamshells, and ceremonial dress. It is a world at the eastern extremities of the Solomon Islands, a place where, on the map and Islands. Another is the construction of round houses. A third is the particular kind of carved wood images which com memorated the dead, to which offerings were made. The making of red feather money- 10 metre long rolls of fibre and dove feathers, intricately coated with the rare, tiny throat feathers of the cardi nal honeyeater (Myzomela cardinalis) is another local feature. to some degree among the people, Melanesia merges with Polynesia. Nearby to the southeast of Graciosa Bay are the Polynesian Islands of Tikopia, Anuta, and Fataka. Polynesian Sikaiana Prior to recent shipping, air transport, and telecommunications, its people were known to those of the nearest large islands of Makira and Malaita as the 'open sea people' (Ivens 1927, 199). The and Ontong Java are further northwest, and Rennell and Bellona directly west. Northeast is Micronesia, including the Santa Cruz Group is more distant than any of the neighbouring islands in the main chain of the archipelago. Some of those can be seen, one from another, and they are within relatively easy reach of each other. But Santa Cruz is known even today as the eastern outer islands of the Solomons. tiny coral island groups of Kiribati, Tuvalu, and Phoenix. To the south Melanesia continues through Vanuatu, towards Fiji. The Santa Cruz people are Melanesian, though with some Polynesian characteristics, especially in the Reef and Duff Islands. The Group shares common characteristics with other parts of the Solomons in its physi cal, climatic, and wildlife environments, as well as in some aspects of culture. It is also a part, however, like others in the region, which has its own distinc tiveness. Perhaps the most notable of these in the material culture was the use of weaving in Santa Cruz, a craft which was not practised in other Solomon The reasons for local distinctiveness throughout the Solomons may reason ably be surmised. Physical separation of the islands by the ocean, and, in the larger islands of parts of an island from other parts by mountain and jungle, played a part, though interaction by canoe was and is important. Some of that interaction, though, was based on traditional strength of group (or clan) identity, and conflict between groups was also important in social and 107 cultural boundary maintenance. One of the most telling manifestations of such local identities is the existence of dis tinct languages even within quite small islands. That combination of common charac teristics and distinctive features of par ticular localities, groups of people, and material products is one which makes interpretation of the art of the Pacific a complex task. It also means that consid eration of some of the art of the Eastern Solomons, starting from these Santa Cruz objects, can demonstrate both the local and some of the more universal characteristics of art objects, their pur poses, use of iconography, use of re sources, means of manufacture, and links with other objects and social activities. Body adornment The tema of Santa Cruz are a distinctive kind of body ornament. They are also part of the extensive use ofbody decora tion which characterises the people of Santa Cruz, their neighbours in Makira and Malaita, and other Melanesian groups in the western Pacific and New Guinea. In these tropical islands cloth ing was not needed for defence against the climate. It was not used day-to-day for reasons of modesty. Yet dress was used in very particular styles of body adornment, through the decorative and symbolic use of natural materials from the ocean and forest. Its variety is summed up by Czarkowska Starzecka and Cranstone: 'The scantiness of clothing contrast with the profusion of ornaments, usually more elabo rate for men than women. In the hair wood or bamboo combs were worn, the handles carved or incised, or decorated with pearl shell inlay or intricate plaiting of yellow, red and black plant stems, depending on the locality. Flowers and scented plants were worn in the hair or tucked into armlets, which - like wristlets - were plaited of coloured plant stems. Wooden plugs, often carved or inlaid, were worn in the ear lobes, their size being increased gradually to ex tend the lobe, and wooden, shell or bone pins were worn in the pierced septum. The most valued ornaments were made of shell. White cowries strung together were worn on the forehead and around the legs, below the knee. Nose ornaments, very popu lar in the Solomons, were also made of shell. In Ontong Java turtleshell nose ornaments of distinctive shape were worn; in Santa Cruz the everyday round turtleshell orna ments were changed to carved pearl-shell plates for dancing. Turtle shell was used frequently for ear ornaments. Ornaments known as kapkap were worn on the forehead or on the breast; white shell discs with su perimposed smaller discs of turtle shell in tricately carved in open work; in Santa Cruz the turtleshell overlay is not circular but consists ofstylised representations offrigate bird, sharkand bonito. Another type of breast plate is of pearl shell in the form of a crescent or a stylised frigate bird. Necklaces were 108 made of seeds, shell beads and teeth of dog, porpoise, cuscus and fruit bat. ornamentation hanging from its points, and protrusions projecting forwards from the face. Around the neck hung the In the main islands heavy rings of the giant clam shell, sometimes with a natural orange tint and decorated with a fringe of beads and teeth, were worn as pendants and were par ticularly precious. The giant clam also pro vided material for thick arm rings. Belts were made of vegetable fibres, sometimes dyed, and the ceremonial ones were of shell beads and teeth, sometimes interspersed with trade beads and seeds. Such belts, like the necklaces and arm rings, were used in cer emonial exchanges or payments as currency. In fact, the dividing line between currency and ornaments is a very fine one, for at times people displayed their wealth by decorating themselves with shell money - strings of white, pink and red discs'. (Czarkowska Starzecka and Cranstone 1974, 35-36) support for the tema, sometimes together with necklaces of shell discs, beads or teeth, drilled and threaded. The tridacna shell discs worn as breastplates were sometimes plain and drilled at the centre to receive the neck chord. More elaborate ones were overlaid with the conventional designs of frigate birds and fish, cut from turtlesheU, and vary ing only in their size, thickness, and craftsmanship. Adornment in Santa Cruz As this general summary suggests, tema were just one kind of object used to provide elaborate displays of aesthetic sensitivity, craftsmanship, ceremony, prowess, prestige, status and wealth among the men of Santa Cruz. Such display was greatest around the head. Combs surmounted with upright dis plays of feathers and palm leaf set off the head and face. In the ears bundles of intertwined rings of shell and turtleshell were fixed in the pierced lobes. The lower part of the nose (septum) carried a carved fretwork plate of mother-of pearl, with strings of bead and shell Arms were decorated above the elbow with rings of shell, above which were worn woven armlets with precise geo metric designs. Into these were inserted lozenge-shaped objects made from wood, beads and shell, with strings or tassels hanging from them, or with pandanus leaf strips, which themselves were decorated in conventional geomet ric shapes and lines. A waistband sup ported the woven napanesa, or skirt: its flat, plain upper section folded between body and waistband. The lower part of the skirt was layered, with bands of decorative weaving interspersed with layers of tassels or shredded fibre. Wrist lets made of palm leaf, fibres, beads and shell complemented the layering of the skirt. Around the knees thongs were tied, to support palmleaf accoutrements to the back of the legs below the knee. Anklets of tiny shell discs, threaded like the necklaces, completed the array. 109 Santa Cmz man in ceremonial dress (see Koch 1971pages112-113) 110 f'\ 0 \ Three sisters UUki D Santa Ana "" Santa Catalina Makira (San Cristobal) Eastern Makira At the eastern tip of the nearest large island to the Santa Cruz Group, Makira or San Cristobal Island, lies the inlet of Star Harbour and the offshore islands of Santa Ana and Santa Catalina. The Sainsbury Collection contains an example of how localised features based on a common theme can be found in the art objects of a region. Consider UEA 755 and 833 in the ways in which we attended to the Santa Cruz breast ornaments: The larger crescent (UEA 755) seen from beneath the glass shelf displays the outer coarse surface of the pearl shell. Two holes drilled at the centre upper edge have a fine plaited thread running through them. The two ends of the thread are tied in a knot, making a loop long enough to pass over one's head. The pearly surface of the shell is notice ably golden, more so around the wider, lower curve. Surmounting the surface, attached by threads at the top of the inner curve, is a turtle shell figure. It is a stylised fish, above which is a bird with forked tail and outstretched wings - or is it a single bird/fish figure, or a bird holding a fish in its claws? UEA 833 is a crescent-shaped figure, with highly polished, pearly surface, finished at each tip with a rounded head and beak. Cut from pearl shell, the sym metrical shape and perfect edges dem onstrate skilful craftsmanship. The object is very smaH, with two holes pierced in the centre of the top edge. What can we infer from this evidence alone? We might presume that the ob ject was used as jewellery, like a brooch or badge. We can see from the material that its maker had access to seashells. The two halves of the crescent might represent the breasts /backs of a double bird figure. What of the holes? For pin ning it to something or for tying some material through? The catalogue entry for UEA 755 and 883 tells us that these items originate in the southeast region of the Solomon Islands and that they were used as neck pendants. 111 112 Catalogue entry Crescent-shaped neck pendants of this type were made in the Malaita and San Cristobal area and were worn by men. Bird imagery occurs on both pendants illustrated here, and the turtle shell overlay on UEA 755 depicts a frigate bird clutching a fish, probably a bonito. Both these species feature prominently in local iconography, for the frigate bird is associated with protective spirits and is often seen at sea above shoals ofbonito, acting as a guide to fishermen. Special fishing expeditions for bonito were formerly an important part of male initiation rites (see Fox 1925; Davenport 1981). Ivens (1927: 393-5) noted that whereas small pendants like UEA 833 were made from local black-lip pearl shell, large examples like UEA 755 had been made since the late nineteenth century from gold-lip pearl shell obtained from European traders. (Note 1) The smaller pendant was formerly in the collection of Harry Beasley and attributed to Santa Ana or Santa Catalina. UEA833 113 Bonito At the beginning of the calm March weather, when the seas are less rough than usual, fishermen of the villages of the eastern Solomons would keep a sharp lookout for the flashes of silvery blue which appear with the arrival of schools of bonito that feed as the tide turns. 'The bonito fish has a sacred character, and to the mind of the people the catching of it asks for something more than mere ordinary skill as a fisherman. The first fish caught every season is sacred, and none but the priests, those whose duty it is to approach the ghosts, have the right to eat it.' (Ivens 1927, 130). Fishing for bonito is an exciting sport and an important source of food even now, as well as being a sacred activity in the past. Then the bonito were thought to have sacred power from their contact with the ancestral spirits, and the magi cal control of the bonito was thought to rest with those spirits which could mani fest themselves in the form of sharks and frigate birds - incarnations of men who during their lifetime had demon strated their power by being successful in catching bonito (Ivens 1927page 137). These tutelary spirits were part of a much wider supernatural world, of dei ties and sea sprites which had never been human, as well as culture heroes who had, and mythical figures who may or may not have been. It was a world which included wild, mischievous, spoiling and deadly spirits as well as benevolent ones. A world where rela tionships with the environment in cluded the need for access to the power of benevolent spirits and control over wild ones (see Note 3). Skill in catching bonito was a demonstration of such means of access and control. Dances, songs, and incantations to the spirits contained many references to bonito, and therewerespecialonesused to help in catching the fish: Cast like a hornbill, eat like a hornbill; Cast like a falcon, eat like a falcon; Cast, eat, Lord First-on-to-the-bonito; This is thy hook I am casting, Lord First-on-to-the-bonito, Cast for bonito of the deep. I shall spread my charm over the bonito of the deep this day. They will sing my praises before the fleet this day. They will be as bonito food for me this day. They will be as the midribs of the sago palm for me this day. They will be as shrimps for me this day. I make incantation, the bonito are jumping. Jumping up the stern of our canoe. To my little rod, to the tip of my little rod. I hooked up my trailing rod. Give me a bite, mouths of bonito. (Ivens 1927, 330-1 see Notes 4 and 5) 114 Initiation The power to catch the fish was given to young boys when they caught their first one during initiation into adulthood. At about the age of twelve the sons of chiefs and of wealthy families were segregated from the women, even their own moth ers, to live in the canoe house. This was the place where ancestral remains were kept, and where rites aimed at securing the favour of ancestral spirits were also centred. The initiation lasted several years, and included preparation for catching their first bonito, which would symbolise their entry into adulthood. During seclusion they were dressed with ornaments made of shell beads, in pat terns of red, white and black, tied round goodly sight to look on, his clear brown skin adorned with the old time ornaments, his face set and his whole manner serious - he was to catch his first bonito and to be made a man. Sea birds wheeled overhead, the black kaule, man of war hawk, the king of them all, gulls, terns, kittiwakes, boobies (brown gan net) all added to the excitement with their shrill cries. The big bonito fish leapt high out of the water as they fed, churning the sea up all around till it fairly boiled. (Ivens 1927, 134 see Note 2) Re-entry into the community as an ad ult was celebrated with a lavish feast, dur ing which the boys stood on a platform, itself sometimes shaped like, or deco rated with the form of, the bonito. Such times of celebration were occasions for full ceremonial dress, in which the cres cent shaped neck pendant had a central place. wrists, ankles and waists. A string of white cowrie shells was worn on the forehead and a large cowrie below each knee. These were the ceremonial regalia of the men. On the upper arm armlets of red and yellow plaited grass and fibre were worn. A comb decorated in red streamers was worn in the hair. The canoes were also sacred, extensively decorated with nautilus shell inlay and painted designs in black, brown and white, particularly of fish and birds. Stems and sterns were festooned with streamers of dyed red fan palm. Fishing rods were deemed to have magical in fluences, especially in their tips. The event of an initiation fishing expedition was described by Ivens: The lad sat in the centre of the canoe, a Frigate bird Wherever schools of bonito appear fol lowing the bait on which they feed, the frigate bird is usually in attendance. The Great Frigate Bird is a metre long from tip of beak to tip of tail, with a 2 metre wingspan and exceptionally light body. Its life is spent mostly soaring quietly in the sky, where it can also display spec tacular flying skills. It sometimes chases other sea birds causing them to dis gorge their newly swallowed food, which it catches in midair as it falls. The frigate also feeds on the fry, or bait, 115 Frigate bird which the bonito prey on and on flying fish which are flushed from the water by the feeding bonito. The presence of frigates was an impor tant omen. Their gathering in numbers above the shoals, and their activities in feeding, could be seen from great dis tances, sometimes longbefore the flashes of silvery-blue on the surface of the sea. Their presence both signalled the ar rival of the bonito and led the fishermen to their quarry. The birds were thought to be incarnations of supernatural be ings, the spirits of ancestors. Like the bonito its sacred character is defined and celebrated in the designs of many objects. The sacred fishing canoes often had their prows shaped like the head of the frigate bird; ritual food bowls used for feasts and making offerings to ancestors were often in the form of frigates; and body ornaments frequently had the image in more or less stylised form as part of their design. 116 Behind the image Those first, tentative steps taken by the the reader can re-approach these par group in coming to know these small ticular objects. Or one might approach objects, which might be regarded as al most insignificant in themselves, show other objects with a view to making the most of what is immediately available, how the puzzling and speculation - the wondering what else might lie behind fun of looking and guessing enjoyed by some - began to open up a realm of the object itself, and seeking to confirm or refute the possibilities which come to understanding through immediate, mind by reference to sources like those direct, engagement with the objects. Via I have used in these examples. the catalogue information, further quests began regarding the images, materials, Shield purposes, origins, and users of these A good place to begin with another object might be with UEA 632, a shield objects. I have added through the third, research-based layer of information from the Central Solomons. It should be something of the social and cultural evident from the focus so far on the context from within which the objects geographical extremes of Western and Eastern Islands, and on the canoe prow and images came. figure and body adornment, that The intention here is not to spoil the fun, Solomon Islanders' art is diverse. but to extend it by showing how a few Extending one's sense of that, while also small and apparently rather insignifi developing an understanding of how to cant objects (relatively speaking, within appreciate similarities and differences the size and diversity of the Sainsbury between artefacts and the cultures in Collection) can provide an opening to a which they are made, is possible by wealth of aesthetic forms, creative prac incorporating the Central Islands of the tices, ways of life, and beliefs, among Archipelago: SantaisabetGuadakanat Malaita, Nggela. The possibilities groups of people whose art is signifi cant to themselves in a number of differ become immense if one seeks to puzzle ent ways. The puzzling of anthropolo gists and other visitors to the region, the bothaboutthis shield in particular, about gathering of information, and the inter about other objects it might be associated with, and their use. pretations which they have placed on its general category as an object, and the production and use of art objects, is intended to suggest ways of thinking The same kinds of general questions about the objects themselves. apply: what is it made from? how was it made? and so on. But one might quickly With this information in hand and mind move to questions which the shield 117 provokes about utility and aesthetics, and design considerations taken into Tahiti, New Zealand, and elsewhere, account by its maker: of wearing pearl shell breast ornaments was it simply an instrument of defence? may be the origin of its introduction to what instrument of hostility might it the Eastern Solomon Islands. He also defend against? why would a shield be so small? claims that the crescent shape, called 'rainbow dahi', is a more recent variant what does the image represent? on the whole-shell 'moon dahi'. How how durable would this image be under attack? ever, similar use of whole and crescent shaped shell breast ornaments was and how strong would the shield itself be? is an important part of ceremonial dress and he argues that the Tahitian custom among Melanesian groups in New These kinds of speculations, and the search for possible answers, will lead Guinea, where shells were traded widely into the interior regions. potentially to extensive information and understanding about a realm of objects 2. Kaule is the South Malaita name for (from the Solomons and from many the frigate bird. Man o'war is the name other cultures) which incorporate an intrinsic and (to me) seemingly given to it by sailors. Kaule itai - where paradoxical relationship between art is the frigate bird - is an important cer emonial dance in South Malaita. and hostility. But such personal speculations mustbegin when the reader stands in front of this shield, as the 3. At the time of writing this chapter I groups did initially with the other objects from the Solomon Islands. English newspaper: Today is the feast day of The Guardian Angels. Everyone Notes has one. Angels are pure spirits, per sons but bodiless, and their job is to 1. What Ivens (1927, 393 - 395) says is praise God, be His messengers and that the gold lip shell was known in the watch over man. The belief that an angel Florida Group, having been 'put into is appointed by God to guard over each circulation' by white traders, whalers, person is widespread, though it has not and labour ships there, from where it been defined by the Church. Guardian was traded by canoe, via Malaita. Ini tially worn whole with the back of the angels act upon men's senses and im agination, rather than their will. The shell outside, he says, it was scarce and idea of celebrating masses for the Guard owned by chiefs. He claims the whalers were present Makira (San Cristobal) ian Angels seems to have originated in came across the following article in an the 12th century. (The Independent 2 October 1994, 28) in 1845. They had Polynesian crews from 1 4. Bonito are in the same class of fish as Buhler, A., Barrow, T. and Mountford, the mackerel and tunnies. In the 1970s C.P. 1962 Oceania And Australia: The Art commercial fishing for bonito began in of The South Seas, London, Methuen. the Solomons, under the direction of a Japanese company. To avoid the sensi Czarkowska Starzecka, D. and tivities of those for whom it was sacred Cranstone, B.A.L. 1974 The Solomon Is the name used for the fish by the com landers, London, British Museum. pany was skipjack tuna. Solomon Islands skipjack tuna can be bought :in Cranstone, B. A. L. 1961 Melanesia: A England from Sainsbury's. Short Ethnography, London, British Mu seum. 5. In 1994 European Union fishermen from member countries, especially Davenport, W.H. 1968 Sculpture of The Spain, France and Britain, engaged in Eastern Solomons, in Expedition, Vol. 10 what were referred to as the tuna wars No. 2 Winter 1968. in the Bay of Biscay, as they competed for shares of the shoals which pass Davenport, W.H. 1981 The National through the Bay in summer. It is said Gallery presents ethnographic art from that for the ancient Greeks and Romans Oceania, in Studies in Visual Communica portions of the flesh from the belly of tion, Vol. 7 pages 74 - 81. tunny formed the centrepiece of classi cal feasts (Pycraft, undated, 469). Further reading Allen, A., House, B., O'Brien, C and Tickle, L. 1974 Images and Islands, Suva, Fox, C. E. 1924 The Threshold of the Pacific: an account of the social organization, magic and religion of the people of San Cristoval in the Solomon Islands, London, Kegan Paul, Trench Trubner and Co. Fiji, UNESCO. Guiart, J. 1963 The Arts of the South Pa Allen, A., Craven, A., House, B., cific, New York, Golden Press. Keleimae, A., O'Brien, C. and Tickle, L. 1978 The Grass Roots Art of The Solomons, Guppy, H.B. 1887 The Solomon Islands Sydney, Pacific Publications. and Their Natives, London, Swan Sonnenschein, Lowry and Co. Breasley, H. G. 1939 The Tamar of Santa Cruz, Ethnologia cranmorensis 4: 27-30 Beermann, I. and Menter, U. 1990 Bernatzik, H.A. 1936 Owa Raha, Vienna, Schmuck der Sudsee: Ornament und Sym bol, Munich, Prestel Verlag. Bernina Verlag. 119 Ivens, W.G. 1927 Melanesians ofthe South east Solomon Islands, London, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner and Co. Koch, G. 1971 Materielle Kultur der Santa Cruz Inseln, Berlin, Museum Fur Volkerkunde. Mead, S.M. 1973 Material Culture and art in the Star Harbour Region, Eastern Solo mon Islands, Toronto, Royal Ontario Museum. Poignant, R. 1967 Oceanic Mythology, London, Hamlyn. Schmidt, C.A. 1968 Oceanic Art: myth, man and image in the South Seas, New York, Abrams. Waite, D. 1983 Art of the Solomon Islands from the collection of the Barbier-Muller Museum, Geneva, Musee Barbier Miiller. Waite, D. 1987 Artefacts from The Solo mon Islands in the Julius Brenchley Collec tion, London, British Museum. White, G.M. 1991 Identity Through His tory: Living Stories in a Solomon Islands Society, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 120 121 Shield UEA632 Ten Modern European Portraits Veronica Sekules The Sainsbury Collection is rich in representations of the face. Here a selection has been made of ten face studies, mostly portraits made in late 19th and 20th·century Europe. It is interesting to look at why and how representations of the face are made, especially in this period when photography has really rendered obsolete the necessity for accurate recording of features. Each of these portraits presents a penetrating likeness that is as expressive of the artist's personality as it is interpreting characteristics of the sitter. Although they might have been inspired by a very private relationship between sitter and artist, they are now subject to public gaze in a public gallery. In that context, a more general significance emerges, a concern with the identity of the individual and the nature of relationships not only between the sitter and artist, but also between sitter and viewer and viewer and artist. Among the selection included here are portraits which have been made as tokens of friendship and given as keepsakes, portraits which idealise and schematise a facial representation, faces which represent emotion or which evoke emotion in the observer, faces which deny any insight into personality but highlight the technique of the artist as virtuoso and faces which use pictorial techniques to explore the psychology of the individual. The portraits are presented here in pairs. Each pair has a theme, or several themes in common. If we compare them, looking for differences and similarities, our interpreta tions of each one might be enriched, as ideas which we see expressed in one will lead us to search the other in a way that perhaps we might not have thought of otherwise. If these comparisons are made systematically and imaginatively, it is a good method for generating questions for further enquiry into wider artistic, social and historical contexts. The comments recorded here as introductions to the pairs of images have been generated in this way, as a result of quite basic comparisons being made. Further reading Brilliant, R. 1991 Portraiture, London, Reaktion. Derrida, J. 1993 Memoirs of the Blind, The Self Portrait and Other Ruins, Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Fraser-Jenkins, D. and Fox-Pitt, S. 1989 Portrait ofthe Artist, Artists' Portraits Published by 'Art News and Review', 1949-1960 London, Tate Gallery. Liggett, J. 1974 The Human Face, London, Constable. 122 Berthe Morisot: Isabelle Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac: Portrait of Colette Both these are portraits of people well known to the artists. Both exploit the special knowledge the artist had of their sitters and hint at mood and psychology of the individual. Colette, the novelist, has been shown towards the end of her life, quietly thoughtful and slightly sad, the mood accentuated by her abundant unruly hair and her large hunched shoulders which cradle a heavily outlined little pointed face. A striking feature of Morisot's portrait of Isabelle Lambert is the occluded left eye which gives the face a slightly frightened and vulnerable aspect, and which contrasts with the impression of bright fresh firmness given by the rest of her features. 123 Berthe Morisot Isabelle Berthe Morisot 1841-1895 Isabelle 1885 pastel on paper 40.0 x 29.8 cm UEA3 124 Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac Portrait of Colette i. Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac 1884-1974 Portrait of Colette 1939 etching on paper 12.7x11.4 cm UEA12 125 126 Amadeo Modigliani: Head of awoman (Anna Zborowska) Chaim Soutine: Woman in Blue Modigliani's portrait is of Anna Zborowska, the wife of his friend and dealer. Soutine's subject is unknown. Both these images are strongly stylised. There is very little illusion of depth, both rely on strong outline and almost flat colour. Each has a marked element of distortion of the shape of the head, the neck and the shoulders and arms. Yet they are very different. The face of the Modigliani (which is the portrait) is masklike, the eyes are empty. The Soutine has a piercing and watchful gaze. The elongation of the Modigliani face makes it look mature and a little careworn whereas the Soutine with its rounded face, high forehead and large ears appears youthful. 127 madeo Modigliani Head of awoman (Anna Zborowska) Amadeo Modigliani 1884~ 1920 Head of a woman (Anna Zborowska) 1917 oil on canvas 53.7 x 36.8 cm UEA13 128 Chaim Soutine Woman in Blue Chaim Soutine 1894-1943 Woman in Blue c.1931 oil on canvas 80.0 x 62.9 cm UEA19 129 130 Pablo Picasso: Head of a woman George Rouault: Girl with a red ribbon Both these representations of unknown females rely in totally different ways on strong pattern-making and heavy outline. The Rouault is a female image made up of patches of colour in a framework of black thick lines. It is perhaps a version of an Empire portrait as the girl appears to be wearing historic dress. Yet representation of the personality of an individual is unimportant. It is engulfed in painterly technique and colour. The Picasso almost subverts the idea of the individual as several views of the face are shown simultaneously in profile and frontally, engulfed in patterns of stripes and cross hatching. The faces are almost communicating with one another. 131 Pablo Picasso Head of a woman Pablo Picasso 1881-1973 Head! of a woman 1926 gouache on paper 12.7 x 10.2 cm UEA10 132 George Rouault Girl with a red ribbon Georges Rouault 1871-1958 Girl with red ribbon 1934 gouache on paper 41.9 x 31.1 cm UEA5 133 134 Alberto Giacometti: Diego Assis Frank Auerbach: Portrait of Leon Kossoff These strongly modelled, heavily shaded drawings are both of fellow artists. The Giacometti represents his brother and collaborator, Diego. The Auerbach is a portrait of Leon Kossoff. In both cases the artists shared considerable closeness and empathy and yet more than all the others these portraits represent introverted isolated figures. In both, the figure almost blends into the shading of the background, heightening their intensity and perhaps also the impression of the fusion of figure and art. 135 Alberto Giacometti Diego Assis Alberto Giacometti 1901-1966 Diego Assis 1948 oil on canvas 80.6 x 50.2 cm UEA51 136 Frank Auerbach Portrait of Leon Kossoff Frank Auerbach b. 1931 Portrait of Leon Kossoff 1957 charcoal on paper 66.0 x 53.3 cm UEA38 137 138 Francis Bacon: Imaginary Portrait of SS Pius XII Antonio Saura: Imaginary portrait of Philip II Both of these are imaginary portraits of figures of authority from the past. Francis Bacon's is one of his series of images of Pope Pius XII after Velasquez, which in some versions he represented as screaming. The Saura is an imaginary portrait of King Philip II of Spain. Both have strong distortions which do violence to the image. Bacon's Pope is a remote figure, his features almost obscured behind a veil of shading. The distortions in the Saura make the face look horrifically unbalanced and a little skeletal, but there is something comical and mocking about the small black hat, the staggered eyes and the crazed grin. In their very different ways, both of these pictures take issue with the genre of the official portrait and reinvent a historical figure, but are they turning them into images with a strong private meaning for the artist, or do they have a wider significance for a modern audience? 139 Francis Bacon Imaginary Portrait of SS Pius XII Francis Bacon 1909-1992 Imaginary portrait of SS Pius XII 1955 oil on canvas 108.6 x 75,6 cm UEA30 140 Antonio Saura Imaginary portrait of Philip II Antonio Saura b. 1930 Imaginary pmtrait of Philip H 1969 oil on paper 69o9x495 cm UEA24 141