Wood
H: 26 cm
Hawaii
18th century
Ex collection:
Earls of Warwick,
Warwick Castle [1]
George Ortiz
(1973-1978)
Count Jean-Jacques
de Launoit (1978-1981)
Made of a lightish
brown wood probably darkened with plant juices and polished, with strands
of human hair pegged into holes on the head, a deep cavity in the centre
of the crown for placing various fetish materials. Left eye still inlaid
with pearl shell.
Condition:
the odd strand of matted hair missing: over left eye, above outer corner
of right eye and at centre back of head behind cavity. A deep crack down
the front of the cone-shaped circular flaring base
[2].
This image
is in all likelihood an 'aumakua, a sort of personal god, "... the primary
idea of the word 'aumakua is the spirit of an ancestor, deified and rendered
potent for good or evil" [3]. Carved according
to a certain ritual by sculptor priests called kahuna kalai and activated
when finished, he was probably used in sorcery and associated with magic.
Hawaiians had an anthropomorphic concept [4] of
the universe and their sculptures embody ancestral deities and cosmic spirits.
To the Polynesians, gods were invisible spirits symbolized by material
objects.
The author
has lived with him for most of the past twenty years and is certain that
the shaman-priest that used him in his invocations imbued him with fearsome
magical power [5], as revealed by his sculptural
[6] forms. His facial expression is aggressive,
awesome and frightening; his forms are bold, vigorous and of an incredible
power. He has a large head since it is the seat of mana. He is vitally
present, and his body and limbs are faceted and sculpted in relation to
each other in a manner that renders him terrifyingly dynamic. His profile
with its incredible jutting chin personifies brutal might.
A very good
comparison is the 'aumakua image in London [7]
collected in 1825 by John Knowles at Hale-o-Keawe Honaunau, Hawaii, when
the H.M.S. Blonde called there. Though very similar there are differences:
it is fifty percent taller, the mouth is almond-shaped and it has no cavity
on the crown of the head or in its back for fetish materials. It was probably
made by a different sculptor at a later date, maybe even Post-Contact.
The eyes, mouth, the arms and the tall neck, among other features, are
less strong, maybe an indication, with the lack of a cavity, that this
god functioned as a protective spirit and was not used for sorcery. Its
blackened surface is slightly different. However, it surely stood on a
base which may have resembled that of this figure, since the outer underside
of both its feet [8] is blackened and only the
inside is the colour of the wood, as are the breaks on the front and inside
of both feet. The back of the right foot is broken off.
In this entry
the author has not discussed Hawaiian religion but has gone into the history
of this image at length and has even related his personal experience. The
reasons are as follows: an assessment of their religion would be conjectural,
and just before the arrival of Europeans important cultural changes were
taking place, a reformation of ideas and particularly religion [9].
The kapu system was completely overthrown in 1819. The history of this
image is essential as he may be one of the few that is genuine in the sense
of having been sculpted - before the arrival of Europeans - with all the
prescribed ritual, and activated. This is demonstrated by the way he is
made and the ethos he exudes. Moreover, he was almost certainly brought
back on the third voyage, although when the the Resolution and the Discovery
docked in England, they were surely already carrying on board images made
during their stop in Hawaii. He is unusual in that he stands on a pedestal
and his hands are connected to his thighs, features common only to temple
images (see footnote 2). Why this is so is uncertain. Very few of
the extant images can be old for a variety of reasons: climatic conditions
would have ensured that they were short-lived, and the disruption of a
highly formal class system would have meant that a political and religious
climate propitious to their creation no longer existed. However, the immediate
awareness of the Europeans' desire for curios motivated a sculptural production
for barter. Davenport [10], following a suggestion
by Kaeppler, says "..., it is quite possible that some of the images that
came back with the early European voyages may have been made expressly
for trade to Europeans rather than for religious or other traditional uses".
Though the outward appearance and the physical way of making such images
may be the same, even if metal tools were used, they are devoid of content
and were not activated. The natives may have kept the outward forms of
ritual for some time but without true faith their images would have been
devoid of meaning, and that is what matters.
What is it
that imbued the Polynesians with this unique gift for creating what are
among the most perfect sculptures that the author knows of, where outward
appearance may reveal content?
Exhibited and
Published:
La découverte
de la Polynésie,cat. no. 177.
Eleven
Gods Assembled, p. 8 ill.
Els Moai
de l'illa de Pasqua, cat. no. 65, pp. 175-179,
213 col. pl.,
p. 249.
Published:
A Collection
of American Indian and Oceanic Art, The Property of the Trustees of
the Warwick Castle Resettlement,
Sotheby's,
London, 8 December 1969, no. 178, ill.
The George
Ortiz Collection of Primitive Works of Art, Sotheby Parke Bernet, London,
29 June 1978, no. 232, pp. 202-203,
full page
col. ill., col. ill. on cover.
Art at
Auction, 1969-70, p. 277.
Cox, J.H.,
Davenport, W.H.: Hawaiian Sculpture
(Honolulu,
1974), cat. no. A24, pp. 167, 101 ill. 51, (and revised edition,
Honolulu 1988).
Peignot, J.:
Découvrir la Polynésie, Connaissance des Arts 240,
1972, p. 49 full page col. ill.
Archeologia
46, May 1972, p. 7, full page col. ill. on cover.
Bounoure,
V.: Vision d'Océanie (Paris, 1992-93), no. 88,
pp. 223, 88
ill.
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1It
is almost certain that this work was acquired in Hawaii on Captain Cook's
third expedition in 1779, and entered the collection of the Earls of Warwick
through Sir Joseph Banks and Charles Greville possibly soon afterwards
and, if not then, surely in 1806.
In a letter
dated 20 August 1973, after he had sold me the piece which he had acquired
at Sotheby's auction of the Warwick estate on 8 December 1969, Ralph Nash
wrote that after much investigation and research, he was convinced that
the piece was "brought back on Captain Cook's ill-fated third voyage" and
ended up in "the great collection of Sir Ashton Lever" who had bought in
1781 almost all the artefacts from this voyage. This so strained his finances
that he was forced to "sell his entire Museum". He attempted to set up
"a trust to operate his Museum" but found "no one interested" and failed.
His desperate efforts to have the "British Government buy the enormous
collection for the British Museum at a fraction of its worth", also failed.
In 1786, he was forced to dispose of his Museum by lottery but only eight
thousand 1 Gn tickets were sold out of thirty-six thousand and he died
a disillusioned and broken man two years later in Manchester. "A Mr James
Parkinson drew the winning number" and became the owner of "the Museum
and all its collections valued at the time at £ 53.000". Everything
was "removed to a house in Albion Street near Blackfriars Bridge. In 1806
a public auction was made of the entire collections by King and Lochee
in a 65-day sale from May 5th to July 19th 1806 and comprised over 7800
different lots and at this sale interested parties came from all over Europe,
England, etc. and it was at this sale that the Vienna Museum acquired all
of its Cook material which they have to this present day in their collections.
Also at this sale was Joseph Banks who bought anonymously both for himself
and for his friend the Hon. John Greville, eldest son of the Earl of Warwick,
and at this sale your Hawaiian figure was sold and so entered the collections
of Warwick Castle as did a number of other items all subsequently sold
at Sotheby's".
Sir Joseph
Banks, President of the Royal Society from 1778 to 1820, was the financial
sponsor of the scientific part of the expedition and was the coordinator
of the results of the voyages of exploration and must have been concerned
with the collection brought home by the expedition after Cook's death in
1779. The Hon. Charles Francis Greville, F.R.S. (1749-1809) was a very
close friend of Banks and, like him, a member of the Dilettanti Society.
He was the younger brother of George, 2nd Earl of Warwick from 1773 to
1816, F.R.S., who was also a friend of Banks and the greatest collector
of his family. Charles Greville is the natural channel through which this
work could have entered the collections of the Earls of Warwick. He himself
may have been the earliest English owner of the work; and it is relevant
to note that he predeceased his brother, died unmarried and lived in the
latter part of his life at Warwick Castle. It may also be noted that Greville
was the nephew of Sir William Hamilton, who presented to the King of Naples
"curiosities ... of Captain Cook's collecting amongst the islands of the
South Seas (entry of 5 June, 1787 in the Italian Journal of Captain Robert
Scott, National Library of Scotland MSS. 2893-95). As relations between
them were close, it is likely that Greville helped Hamilton to make this
acquisition of Pacific antiquities. In referring to objects from the Collection
of the Earls of Warwick, The Trustees of the Warwick Castle Resettlement,
Dr. A. Kaeppler says (Artificial Curiosities <Honolulu, 1978>, p. 5
n. 9): "Some of the objects from this collection were certainly from Cook's
voyages, but no documents can be found that can identify which objects
came from Cook's voyages and which did not".
M.W. Farr,
Warwickshire County Archivist, kindly wrote to the author on 7 November
1986 stating that a description of the Castle was made by the Rev. William
Field, published in 1815. In it is described the Armoury Passage, The Museum,
where, says Farr: "... there was a very large collection of miscellaneous
armour and antiques". An inventory was made in 1853 and Farr adds: "Unfortunately
most of the exhibits were beyond the descriptive powers of the maker of
the inventory, but he does apply the words 'South Sea' to quite a lot of
them, mostly in what he calls the 'Indian Department'. There is an 'Indian
God' between some stuffed owls and a flying fish on an earlier page, but
it is impossible to say whether this is really your Hawaiian figure. The
whole area was an extraordinary muddle of interesting but unrelated things."
He concludes: "I think your carving must have been on show in this part
of the Castle". It should be noted that under the section "The Indian Department",
there were pieces of South Sea ornament and manufacture.
2
Cox (Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: Hawaiian Sculpture [Honolulu, 1988],
p. 101) points out that its being on a pedestal is unusual as are also
the hands connected to the thighs, features common only to temple images.
3
Kaeppler, A.L.: Eleven Gods Assembled, p. 4.
4
Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: op. cit., p. 23 (Cox).
5
The author has become an agnostic and does not believe in any religion
or ideology but is convinced that there is a power of mind over matter
and that certain humans can imbue material objects with powers which may
be beneficial or malevolent to certain beholders. During the first few
years of his ownership of this image, every woman that saw it in his home
was horrified and disliked it. It made them feel uneasy. For unfortunate
personal reasons the author had to sell his collection at Sotheby's. When
the 'aumakua came up and just as Peter Wilson, a friend of the collector
and Chairman of Sotheby's, had his arm raised about to drop the hammer,
the author turned to his wife at the fractional instant and blurted out
as though from the depth of his plexus "Do you think that he'll forgive
me for letting him go?" The author's wife was horrified. Three years later
he was able to buy him back and one day having told been told of a Greek
Orthodox priest who practised exorcism, he said to himself "why not, let's
try something". He arranged an appointment and the priest accepted to conduct
a forty-minute ritual with incense and invocations over the 'aumakua as
the author sat silent on a chair. Amazingly enough, from that day onwards,
the image no longer gives off evil, he has been neutralized. The author
cannot explain this but can only relate what he observes.
6
Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: op. cit., pp. 94-103. In these pages
Cox discusses very thoroughly 'aumakua images with comments on the
present figure p. 101 pl. 51, text p. 103.
7
British Museum 1944 OC 2.716: Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: op. cit.,
A19, p. 166 (Cox).
8
The author wishes to thank Mrs. Jill Hassel who answered his questions
over the phone after having kindly examined the British Museum example
in storage.
9
Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: op. cit., p. 104 (Cox).
10
Cox, J.H., Davenport, W.H.: op. cit., p. XXIII (Davenport).
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