Spatula in cassowary bone, Trobriand Islands - Lot 69

Lot 69
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Estimation :
800 - 1200 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 780EUR
Spatula in cassowary bone, Trobriand Islands - Lot 69
Spatula in cassowary bone, Trobriand Islands Cassowary bone, vegetable fibers, pig tusk XIX-XX° century Height: 39 cm Provenance:. Collected by Anthony JP Meyer and Harry Beran on the island of Dobu island. Harry Beran Collection (HB 454). Marcia and John Friede. The Jolika Collection. Rye, New York bibliography: - Marcelin, 2016. Art Massim, reproduced on page 194 The rarity and absence of the cassowary among the Massim is matched by the importance of the object, the work of art. The cassowary was unquestionably absent from the Massim area; its bones were imported, and the spatulas fashioned in the Trobriand Islands. These rare spatulas were made, intended and reserved for high-ranking individuals or village chiefs, from this bone to which a half-circle cut from a pig's tusk was attached at the top by means of fiber ligatures. The suspended ends were decorated with mother-of-pearl pearl oyster shells, shell disks and seeds. Harry Beran notes that the spatula was given to him on Dobu Island, but that it came from the Trobriand Islands. At the time, the upper part was decorated with plastic disks. These have now been replaced by shell disks, along with the decorations attached to each end.
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