Splashboard (Lagim)
ClassificationsTools and Equipment-splashboards
Culture
Massim
Date20th Century
Made AtMilne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea
Collection SiteMilne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea
MediumWood and paint
Dimensions34 1/2 × 17 3/8 × 2 1/2 in. (87.6 × 44.1 × 6.4 cm)
Credit LineCollected on behalf of the Bowers Museum by the Roski-Keller-Martin Expedition
Object number2014.12.8
DescriptionSplashboards are an important part of the canoes used for kula trade voyages. Each canoe has two splashboards, one on the bow and one on the stern, which hold up the sideboards, increase the depth of the hull and keep the ocean water from splashing the people traveling in the canoe. There are not many known examples of snake designs such as those seen here. Those that can be found are from Yanaba Island, the Louisade Archipelago, Gawa and Kwaiwata. When snakes are employed, it has been said that they only appear is the upper right section of the splashboard. This design obviously does not align with this information. Animal designs on splashboards are thought of as tools to interpret its overall meaning. The animal’s color and form have a deeper interconnected meaning. Snakes also hold a special place in a carver’s initiation rites and symbolically stand for designs slipping into the mind of the carver, into his body and onto the carving itself.On View
Not on viewCollections
mid 20th Century