Wedding coins Tevau, Santa Cruz, I. Salomon - Lot 105

Lot 105
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Estimation :
7000 - 12000 EUR
Wedding coins Tevau, Santa Cruz, I. Salomon - Lot 105
Wedding coins Tevau, Santa Cruz, I. Salomon Feathers Dimension 78 cm Provenance: Ex: Ex.French private collection Spectacular in size, fascinating in the process of creation and aesthetically surprising in design, the red feather coin rolls from the Santa Cruz Islands were used as currency in the Pacific. Produced over an entire year, their manufacture was a secret jealously guarded by coiners. Birders would attract the Myzomèles cardinaux - small nectar-loving sparrows with hypnotic bright-red down - to pluck them, before releasing them. 600 feathers later, a second craftsman would make the plates - or lendu - the repeated elements forming the tevau coin. Each lendu was assembled from rows of red Myzo-mèle cardinal feathers glued with mulberry gum to a fine carpet of green-grey feathers from a local pigeon. Finally, a bookbinder riveted the 1,500 to 1,800 lendu onto strips of hibiscus fiber before winding them into a double spiral from which lucky charms could be hung: seeds, pig's teeth... Once completed, these coins were used as "wedding money", to pay the bride's family their dowry. In addition to their ceremonial value, tevau coins were also used to purchase precious goods, such as deep-sea pirogues in this archipelago where the ocean reigns supreme. Like marriages, not all tevau coins were equal. They were classified into ten categories according to size and the intensity of their carmine glow. This rare, imposing, dazzling example, a testament to this know-how, its refined graphics, its vivid color, its past importance and its timeless, resolutely contemporary aestheticism.
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