Funerary Pole
55-17-4
From: Australia | Northern Australia | Melville Island
Curatorial Section: Oceanian
Object Number | 55-17-4 |
Current Location | Collections Storage |
Culture | Tiwi |
Provenience | Australia | Northern Australia | Melville Island |
Date Made | 1954 |
Section | Oceanian |
Materials | Wood | Pigment |
Technique | Carved | Painted |
Description | Funerary pole (Pukamani pole, or "Tudini" meaning pole), carved from the wood of a bloodwood tree and painted with natural red and yellow ochres, white clay and black from charcoal. At top, head and face. Made by a Gelburn Island born man who had lived on Melville Island since he was about 14 years old. Some months after a burial, the Tiwi people of Melville Island, off the coast of Northern Australia, place carved and painted poles around the grave of the deceased, amid dancing and singing, ats the climax of traditional funerary observances. In 1954 Bryn Mawr anthropologist Jane Goodale commissioned a set of eight Pukumani poles for the collections of the Penn Museum. Due to size constraints imposed by the shipper, they are slightly less than normal height. |
Height | 207 cm |
Credit Line | National Geographic / University Museum Expedition; Jane C. Goodale, 1955 |
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