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Canoe Model, mid 20th Century
Umboi (Siassi) Island, Morobe Province, Bismarck Archipelago, Pa…
Model Canoe
Canoe Model, mid 20th Century
Umboi (Siassi) Island, Morobe Province, Bismarck Archipelago, Pa…
Canoe Model, mid 20th Century Umboi (Siassi) Island, Morobe Province, Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea, Melanesia Wood; 4 3/8 × 36 1/8 × 3 1/2 in. 2018.14.34 Anonymous Gift

Model Canoe

ClassificationsSculpture-models
Datemid 20th century
Collection SiteMorobe Province, Papua New Guinea
Made AtEast Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea
MediumWood
Dimensions4 3/8 × 36 1/8 × 3 1/2 in. (11.1 × 91.8 × 8.9 cm)
Credit LineAnonymous Gift
Object number2018.14.34
DescriptionBased on the similarities between the prow elements of this model canoe and another full-size canoe prow included in this donation, this object is almost certainly from the Murik Lakes, just west of where the Sepik River meets the ocean. Unlike the river dwellers of the Sepik, who rely on small canoes for travel, inhabitants of the coastal region rely on large ocean-going canoes for travel. Actual life size canoe prows from the Murik Lakes tend to feature oval-shaped anthropomorphic figurehead at the top end, and zoomorphic head at the opposite end of the prow. Geometric designs featured around the heads are also commonly found on canoe prows from this region.

Prows often represent spiritual beings or clan symbols, and sometimes evoke the properties of the being represented. Often times, the figures represented are used as protection for the voyagers within the canoe. In pre-colonial times, the completion of new canoe would undertake a launching rite, of which the canoes would be daubed with substance that were thought to transform it from an artificial object into a “cosmic agent of productivity.” Women and children paint the designs on the canoe with white lime paint. The canoe prows would also be daubed with three red substances: a mixture of red ochre and coconut oil to enhance sexual attractiveness, blood of purification expelled from the penis by urethral insertion to cleanse the canoe, and blood of a human sacrifice. There is little information regarding this final aspect of the launching rite, other than the victims would have most likely been captured women from a non-Murik village.
On View
Not on view
Canoe Prow, early to mid 20th Century
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