- 50
Tête, Maori, Nouvelle-Zélande
Description
- Maori
- Tête
- wood, mother of pearl
- haut. 32,5 cm
- 12 3/4 in
Provenance
Piet Blanckaert, Bruges
Collection privée, Belgique, ca. 1980
Transmis par descendance
Exhibited
"Carved Head (House ornament) From Urewere, n° 151 a", inscrit au dos à l'encre noire
Literature
Catalogue Note
Elle s'apparente étroitement à la sculpture ornant la porte qui, jusqu'en 1845, donnait accès au village de Pukeroa pa (rive du lac Rotorua), conservée à l'Auckland Institute and Museum (Moko Mead, Te Maori Maori Art from New Zealand Collections, 1984, p. 195 et couverture). "Sur ce personnage masculin, l'artiste a utilisé un masque facial au tatouage Arawa réaliste. Le visage était à l'origine peint en blanc et les tatouages rehaussés de noir" (Moko Mead, idem). La polychromie restaurée de l'œuvre d'Auckland laisse entrevoir la patine claire du bois très ancien, comme ici, où les motifs sont également rehaussés de noir. Voir aussi Sotheby's (Paris, 30 novembre 2010, n° 74) pour une tête de proue de pirogue au style réaliste comparable, dont la bouche ouverte représenterait, selon David R. Simmons "Hema, héros légendaire de la mythologie Maori".
Head, Maori, New Zealand
In 1966 La tête was one of Jacques Kerchache's first exhibitions dedicated to 'Primitive Art'. The cover of the catalogue, the foreword of which was written by the poet and art critic Max-Pol Fouchet, features this impressive Maori head, the back of which bears an old inscription which, together with the carving style, indicates that it once adorned a piece of architecture.
The offered head is closely related to the sculpture which, until 1845, was the gateway to the village of Pukeroa pa on the foreshore of Lake Rotorua, and which is now in the Auckland Institute and Museum (Moko Mead, Te Maori: Maori Art from New Zealand Collections, 1984, p. 195 and cover). 'In this male figure the artist has used an Arawa realistic tattooed face mask [...] The face of the figure was originally painted white with black tattoo [...]' (Moko Mead, ibid.). The restored polychromy on the Auckland sculpture reveals the light patina of the very old wood. The same surface is visible in the offered lot, the tattoo of which is also accented with black. See also Sotheby's (Paris, 30 November 2010, lot 74) for a canoe prow ornament in a similar realistic style, the open mouth of which represents, according to David R. Simmons, 'Hema, a legendary hero of Maori mythology.'