Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas

Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas

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Property from the Estate of Valerie Franklin, Sold to Benefit the Hood Museum of Art

Throwing Club, Fiji

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May 18, 06:12 PM GMT

估價

700 - 1,000 USD

拍品資料

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描述

Property from the Estate of Valerie Franklin, Sold to Benefit the Hood Museum of Art

Throwing Club, Fiji


Length: 24 1/2 in (62.2 cm)

Denver Art Museum
Harry A. Franklin, Beverly Hills, acquired from the above by exchange in April, 1962
Valerie Franklin, Los Angeles, by descent from the above

Throwing clubs, or i ula, were invariably made of a single piece of wood, usually an uprooted shrub. The present lot is an i ula tavatava, its name referring to the form of its “elegant fluted head” (Clunie, Fijian Weapons and Warfare, Suva, 1977, p. 60), rather than to the characteristic zig-zag grip carving, which is also known as tavatava.


The Wesleyan missionary Thomas Williams wrote that a “weapon much used is the missile club, which is worn stuck in the girdle, sometimes in pairs, like pistols. […] This is hurled with great precision, and used formerly to be the favourite implement of assassination.” (Williams, and Stringer, ed., Fiji and the Fijians, Vol. I: The Islands and their Inhabitants, London, 1858, p. 57).