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Treasure box (waka huia)
Maori
19th century
Object Place: New Zealand; Object Place: Aotearoa
Medium/Technique
Wood, pigment, haliotis shell
Dimensions
58.42 cm (23 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of William E. and Bertha L. Teel
Accession Number1994.422a-b
CollectionsAfrica and Oceania
ClassificationsBoxes
Chiefs used containers such as this to store personal property and valuable family heirlooms, among them nephrite pendants, ear ornaments, and bone combs. Often referred to as feather boxes, the receptacles also held the black-and-white tail feathers of the huia bird (Heteralocha acutirostris), which served as hair decoration emblematic of high rank. Since the boxes hung from the rafters in chiefs' houses, their undersides were visible and were usually as elaborate as the lids. An owner could pass the box down as a family heirloom or give it as an honored gift to someone special. The object sometimes also received its own name. As personal possessions of chiefs, the container and its contents became imbued with tapu. Three types of treasure boxes have been distinguished; this example is a wakahuia, more frequent in central and eastern North Island. All surfaces of the oblong container and its detachable lid are embellished with raised reliefs of double spirals and intertwined pattern called unaunahi. Projecting from each end is a carved figure with a schematic body, aggressive features, and shell eyes. This box was collected about 1864-66 at a time when Maori relief carving became increasingly elaborate.
ProvenanceBetween 1864 and 1866, acquired in New Zealand by Horatio Gordon Robley (b. 1840 – d. 1930) [see note 1]; 1902, sold by Robley to the Königlich Zoologisches, Anthropologisch-Ethnographisches Museum, later the Museum für Völkerkunde, Dresden (inventory no. 13813) [see note 2]; 1987, exchanged by the Museum für Völkerkunde with Everett Rassiga (dealer; b. 1922 - d. 2003), Bern. Morris Pinto (b. 1925 – d. 2009), Geneva and New York. May 26, 1992, sold by Tambaran Gallery, New York, to William and Bertha Teel, Marblehead, MA; 1994, year-end gift of William and Bertha Teel to the MFA. (Accession Date: January 25, 1995)
NOTES: [1] Major General Horatio Gordon Robley of the British army arrived in New Zealand in 1864 to fight in the New Zealand wars. While there, he studied the Maori language and culture, sketched scenes of the war and the daily life of the Maori, and fathered a child with Harete Mauao, daughter of a Maori chief. He departed in 1866. It is not known precisely when or how he acquired this treasure box. [2] Purchased in 1902 with the financial support of Arthur Baessler (b. 1857 – d. 1907), Eberswalde, Germany.
NOTES: [1] Major General Horatio Gordon Robley of the British army arrived in New Zealand in 1864 to fight in the New Zealand wars. While there, he studied the Maori language and culture, sketched scenes of the war and the daily life of the Maori, and fathered a child with Harete Mauao, daughter of a Maori chief. He departed in 1866. It is not known precisely when or how he acquired this treasure box. [2] Purchased in 1902 with the financial support of Arthur Baessler (b. 1857 – d. 1907), Eberswalde, Germany.