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A master-carver’s wood working adze
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A master-carver’s wood working adze

Galerie Meyer-Oceanic Art

Date 18th/19th century

Epoque 1750-1850, 18th century, 19th century

Origine Polynesia, Cook Islands

Medium Basalt, Wood, Coconut fiber, Fish skin

Dimension 66.5 x 9.2 x 26.7 cm (26¹/₈ x 3⁵/₈ x 10¹/₂ inches)

A master-carver’s wood working adze mounted with a long, tanged, triangular blade. The elegance and dimensions of the blade as well as its remarkable state of preservation show that this was a tool of the utmost importance. It is reported that artists would put their favorite adze “to sleep” in the temple on the night before beginning an important sculpture so that the adze would benefit from the powers instilled by the gods. The shaft is superbly rendered with a complex cross section ranging from the flared, perfectly circular pommel to oval and on to a sharp-ended egg shape towards the heel of the adze. The binding is made of sennit (braided coconut husk) tightly wrapping the tanged blade to its carved-out lodging and buffered with a section of shark or stingray skin.

Rarotonga or Mangaia Islands, Cook Islands, Polynesia. basalt, coconut fiber, fish skin, wood. 66,5 x 9,2 x 26,7 cm. 18th/19th century.

Date: 18th/19th century

Epoque: 1750-1850, 18th century, 19th century

Origine: Polynesia, Cook Islands

Medium: Basalt, Wood, Coconut fiber, Fish skin

Dimension: 66.5 x 9.2 x 26.7 cm (26¹/₈ x 3⁵/₈ x 10¹/₂ inches)

Provenance: From the private collection of a British antique furniture dealer c. 1940/50.

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Galerie Meyer-Oceanic Art

Tribal Art dealer specializing in early Oceanic Art since 1980 and archaic Eskimo Art since 2010

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