- Related Topics:
- Oceanic arts
- art
- Oceania
- Pacific Islander
- dendroglyph
Like those of the Marquesas Islands and Easter Island, the artists of the Hawaiian Islands developed their own variants on Polynesian style. This resulted partly from isolation, partly from the structure of religious belief, and partly from the existence of a warlike aristocracy. Featherwork, for example, was made and used in other parts of Polynesia, but no other group produced anything as spectacular as the feather cloaks, capes, and helmets of Hawaiian chiefs. These were worn not only for important ceremonial occasions but also for actual combat. In fact, the relatively small trapezoidal capes, thought to be an early form, were designed so that the fit of the straight edge around the neck would afford some protection from attack. Larger cloaks have rounded necks and rounded lower edges with flaring sides; they were constructed of mostly red and yellow feathers, with some black and green. The feathers were attached in bunches to a netted base. The cloaks were decorated with triangles, lozenges, circles, squares, and sweeping crescents. With the cloaks, chiefs wore wicker helmets, shaped as caps with crescentic crests, which were also covered in feathers. Heads of the war god were also made of wickerwork covered with red feathers; the mouths on such heads were set with dog’s teeth, and the eyes were made of large mother-of-pearl plates with wooden knobs for the pupils. Some were equipped with locks of human hair, others had crests resembling those of the helmets. These formidable images were carried into battle on long poles.
Wooden figures of divinities fall into several types and styles. The largest formed part of the settings of the sacred enclosures. Posts, carved at the top with rudimentary human forms, including heads with slanting eyes, wide mouths, and chevron-shaped brows, were parts of fences. Flat figures or faces topped with panels decorated with chevrons or silhouettes were kept inside the enclosures. Three-dimensional, full-length figures or busts on posts stood at the gate of the enclosure, at points within it, and in a semicircle facing a sacrificial altar. They were often well over life-size. The majority that survive are in the so-called Kona-district style dating from the late 18th to early 19th century; like the feathered war-god heads, they are associated with the reign of Kamehameha I (1782–1819). The bodies of the figures are massive assemblages of swelling conical or tubular segments, often sharply demarcated. The heads are proportionately large and have thrusting chins; the extremely exaggerated horizontal mouths are shaped like a figure eight and are filled with menacing teeth and outlined with ridges. The heads are crowned with voluminous knobbed coiffures; plaits sweep down and back, incorporating the ridged eyes.
The conventions of Kona-style bodies occur in some earlier figures, including smaller figures of gods mounted on props, apparently personally owned by chiefs. Many differences in detail exist. Some of the figures have crested helmets, while others have elaborate tiered headdresses, triple-peaked headdresses, or none at all. Several were clearly made as pairs. Small figures without props were privately owned by families. Many of these have Kona-style bodies, helmets, crests, and other such features, but some female figures were carved in a fleshy, naturalistic style and were adorned with human hair. The small figures embodied protective gods and spirits and were used as containers for sorcery materials. Human figures adorn a number of other items, including bowls and racks for spears and poles. They are sometimes positioned with raised hands or in a headstand.
The Hawaiians made many types of personal ornament. The best-known is probably the hook-shaped whale ivory pendant, which was traditionally strung on coils of human hair. For clothing, especially for loincloths, skirts, and cloaks, the Hawaiians impressed and painted tapa with geometric designs in red and brown; the manufacturing tradition continued long after Western contact, with subsequent changes in designs and use of colour.
The Polynesian outliers
Small populations speaking Polynesian languages live within the geographic areas of Melanesia and Micronesia, on islands in the Caroline, Solomon, and Vanuatu groups. They are apparently immigrants, largely from western Polynesia, who arrived at various times in the latter 1st millennium ad. Although in many cases the culture of these groups is generally Micronesian, their art often resembles Polynesian works. Figure sculpture, for example, often exhibits the characteristic protruding buttocks. Some figures have flat faces with horizontal brows and pointed chins similar to those found in western Polynesia.
A marked feature of decorative design in much of this area is the repetition of small triangles in rows. This theme is also expressed in three dimensions as rows of pyramids or truncated pyramids. The design is found on dance paddles, canoe prows, house posts, bowls, headrests, stools, and other small objects.
Micronesia
Micronesia can be divided into two style areas. Western Micronesia consists of the island groups in the western Caroline archipelago, including Palau and the states of Yap and Truk (Chuuk). Eastern Micronesia includes the eastern Caroline Islands, the Marshall Islands, and Kiribati. The Mariana Islands, which lie north of the Caroline Islands, do not figure in this account, because of the obliterating effects of late 17th-century Spanish occupation on their population and its culture.
Throughout Micronesia, forms are exceedingly basic; decorative detail is largely geometric, consisting of bands of solid colour and rows of triangles in various patterns. Zoomorphs and anthropomorphs are relatively rare and are often expressed as silhouettes. The most frequent use of even this amount of decoration is found in the western Carolines, diminishing to none in eastern Micronesia.
The most frequently decorated items in the western Carolines were buildings and canoes, reflecting their importance in Micronesian society. Indeed, double-hulled canoes with crescent-shaped sterns and prows served as models for shrines constructed in Palau, Truk, and other smaller islands. Carved birds were sometimes placed in the shrines. The actual canoes of Truk were given elegant prow and stern ornaments with highly stylized sea swallows standing beak to beak. The most impressive buildings in the western region are the men’s houses of Palau, which incorporate the greatest incidence of representational art in Micronesia. The gables were screened with horizontal planks that were engraved and painted with mythical and historical scenes. A life-size figure of a seated woman was often attached at the lower centre of the gable. The carved face of a god appeared at the peak of the gable. Other architectural elements, including the posts and beams, featured relief carvings similar to those on the gable. Palauan carving was otherwise restricted to large ceremonial bowls and covered boxes in avian form and to stools. The wood was treated to produce a dark red surface and was inlaid sparingly with tridacna shell in abstract patterns. Some modeling was used to decorate ceramic oil lamps.
In Yap the ceremonial houses were less lavishly adorned. Posts and beams were painted with silhouettes of dugongs and with black-and-white patterns of triangles or were carved with human and animal figures. Crude figures of birds and animals were hung in front of the house gables. The houses stood on platforms of coral blocks, onto which faces were sometimes carved. A trident, sometimes with a bird perched on the central prong, was a characteristic feature of Yapese art and is found on prow and stern canoe carvings, headdresses, and house decorations.
Eastern Micronesia produced no significant carving, apart from paddle-shaped dance staffs and plain, fan-shaped canoe prows. Material culture as a whole was simple and utilitarian. Kiribati warriors wore armour—trousers and jackets with high protective panels at the back of the neck. These suits were woven of sennit and embroidered in human hair with geometric designs.
Weaving of banana and hibiscus fibre on backstrap looms was practiced throughout the Caroline Islands, except in Palau. The fine yarns, which were dyed black, brown, and red, were woven into loincloths, sashes, skirts, and burial shrouds. Their geometric patterning paralleled the designs used in carved decorations and tattooing. In the Marshall Islands, pandanus and coconut strips were plaited into square mats worn as clothing. These were decorated with borders of checks, stripes, and rectilinear designs, which were closely related to social rank and degrees of sanctity.
Douglas Newton