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Polynesia

far left: Door plank (joyo jopo or tale)

New Caledonia, French Polynesia

late 19th century. Object Place: New Caledonia, French Polynesia; Object Place: New Caledonia

others: Papua New Guinea

centre right: Yipwon figure Middle Sepik River, Papua New Guinea 20th century

Object Place: Papua New Guinea; Object Place: Middle Sepik river, Sepik River

Overall: 97.2 cm (38 1/4 in.)

ACCESSION NUMBER 2014.306

Wood

Arts of Asia, Oceania, and Africa Gallery (Gallery 177)

far right: Suspension hook

Iatmul peoples, Sepik River, Papua New Guinea

20th century

Object Place: Village of Aibom, Ambunti district, Middle Sepik River area, New Guinea

91.44 x 27.9 x 15.2 cm (36 x 11 x 6 in.)

ACCESSION NUMBER 1991.1077

Wood, fiber, shell, and pigment

Arts of Asia, Oceania, and Africa Gallery (Gallery 177) Although most figurative suspension hooks found throughout the Middle Sepik region have a flat lower element resembling an anchor or half moon, their style varies greatly. They range in size from twelve to eight inches. Very large hooks with elaborately carved figures may have hung in men’s ceremonial houses as sculptures rather than as utilitarian objects. Like freestanding figures, which resemble them in style and size, they may have ritual significance, representing protective clan spirits. This hook from the ceremonial men’s house in the latmul village of Aibom was collected during a 1963 census. The hook proper is a pointed half-moon shape with a raised relief of a schematic face. It supports a slender, round-shouldered female figure standing hands-to-hips with flexed legs and arms. The artist emphasized the large face with its long nose, pierced septum, and shell eyes by painting curvilinear lines and circles on the white surface, thus echoing the face painting of latmul women. White accents enhance the dark body and limbs, and raffia attachments adorn the ears, septum, and wrists.

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Uploaded on November 19, 2019
Taken on January 29, 2017