Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas
Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas
Property from the Estate of Valerie Franklin, Sold to Benefit the Hood Museum of Art
拍品已結束競投
May 18, 06:12 PM GMT
估價
700 - 1,000 USD
拍品資料
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)
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).