In January the project sent conservation intern Rachel Howie to the Musée du quai Branly, in preparation for conserving a Kanak mask, here is her report:

'Kanak, l'art est une parole' at the Musee du Quai Branly

‘Kanak, l’art est une parole’ at the Musee du Quai Branly. Photo R Howie.

A few weeks ago I had the fantastic opportunity, on behalf of the Pacific Presences research project, to visit Paris in order to see the temporary exhibition at the Musee du Quai Branly titled ‘Kanak, l’art est une parole’. It is the largest exhibition held on Kanak culture in Europe, including many spectacular objects, for example jade ceremonial axes, pole sculptures and a large number of statuettes and ornaments. The objects that I was particularly interested in were the 12 dancing masks on display, as my visit was in preparation for the work I will be undertaking on two Kanak masks from New Caledonia at MAA. In addition, I was able to discuss with the lead conservator on the project, Stéphanie Elarbi, some of the treatments that were needed to ensure the stability of the masks before they went on display in the exhibition.

Two Kanak masks at MAA undergoing conservation. Photo R Howie.

Two Kanak masks at MAA undergoing conservation. Photo R Howie.

 

Really delighted at the outcome of the two-day public symposium, which we organised, in collaboration with Beatriz Robledo of the Museo de America in Madrid Spain at the end of last year (3-4 December 2013). The idea of hosting a research workshop was planted during a preliminary visit to the museum in Madrid back in November 2010: Beatriz and her team were so enthusiastic about their Pacific collections they wanted to get more opinions and compare their collections with taonga overseas. Our workshop brought together researchers from the United Kingdom, Netherlands, Spain and New Zealand for two days of discussion in order to raise the profile of the museum’s fantastic Tongan and Tahitian collections and sought to combine recent artefacts-based ethnographic research with the archival expertise of current Spanish scholarship. We had an extremely lively public debate at the end of our two days which highlighted for me the multi-faceted (and, how can I say? somewhat dissonant/distanced) perception of the Pacific, its art and peoples, within Spain today. Polynesia really does seem a million miles away when you’re in the heart of Castile so that exploring the nuances of Polynesian cosmology alongside genealogical and historical legacies in the Pacific today felt particularly onerous. Our panel took up the challenge with gusto and six of us delivered half-hour papers (with UN-style simultaneous translation which was a first for most!) which I hope offered fresh perspectives on specific artefacts within the Spanish collections and focused attention on the living dynamic of Pacific peoples today.

The symposium program.

The symposium program.

 

Day One: We were thrilled to be joined by colleagues at the museum including Carmen Cerezo who was able to share her expertise having worked with the Pacific collections at the museum for many years. Head of Ethnography Beatriz Robledo gave an overview of the history of the Pacific collections in Madrid and Mercedes Amézaga talked us through the wonderful, yet sensitive restoration project she has recently overseen which has meant the Tongan feather headdress or pala tavake, whose recent rediscovery has caused such excitement in Tongan communities, can now be displayed in the permanent galleries. The exuberance and enthusiasm of renowned Spanish scholar Francisco Mellén was tangible as he emphasised the role of the earliest Spanish navigators to the Pacific, highlighting the sheer extent of Spanish enquiry within the region from the16th century onwards. It was wonderful to finish the day’s proceedings with a fresh perspective altogether: friend and colleague Juan Pimentel (CSIC), a historian of Science, focused our imaginations and intellect on the philosophical dimension of Alejandro Malaspina’s extensive expedition to the Pacific during the late 18th century.

Francisco Mellen delivers his paper

Francisco Mellen delivers his paper. Photo M Nuku.

 

Day Two: Our own papers focused on Tonga: its artefacts and complex histories beginning with Andrew Mills’ detailed stylistic account of weapons and clubs across the region which conveyed the complexity of interaction across islands and archipelagos. Wonu Veys placed the museum’s recent rediscovery of a thirty metre length of uncut barkcloth acquired by Malaspina into its full historical context. A dual panel focusing on the pala tavake followed with Phyllis Herda presenting a wonderfully nuanced discussion of its resonance in 18th century Vava’u and Billie Lythberg evaluating the likely provenance of a closely associated feather headdress in Vienna. Billie’s paper brought us right up to date with vivid and striking new works created by Tongan artists including Benjamin Work and Dagmar Dyck in response to the surfacing of the pala tavake at the museum. This set the stage perfectly for Hilary Scothorn who crucially brought us right up to date with a visual feast showcasing art and life in Tonga and its diasporic communities today. Not wanting to leave central Polynesia out of the mix! I finished off the day with a paper addressing the cosmological artistry embedded a set of fantastic 18th century Tahitian pearlshell artefacts which were likely brought to Madrid on the return of a voyage commissioned by the Spanish crown to establish a Catholic mission on Tahiti during the late 1770s. Delegates then had the opportunity to join conservators in the museum stores to look closely at specific and rare artefacts from Polynesia and assist in their identification. A publication of the papers is planned for 2014 and three of the speakers (Lythberg, Herda and Nuku) will present their papers at the forthcoming Pacific Arts Association Europe (PAA-E) taking place in Cologne on 24-26th April 2014.

Andy Mills, Wonu Veys and Billie Lythberg

Andy Mills, Wonu Veys and Billie Lythberg. Photo M Nuku.

 

Travel in Spain is always enhanced by the wealth of fantastic art commissions, which fill the walkways and terminals throughout its network of airports. Sensuous architecture, poetry and murals take the place of advertising and fill the space of transition. We were transfixed by this huge mural on our way out of Barajas International Airport … created by Ecuadorian painter Oswaldo Guayasamín in recognition of indigenous histories on the continent of America, the words of Guatemalan writer and dramatist Mario Monteforte – ‘Y entre los muros blancos junataron las sangres’ – writ large alongside a phrase attributed to Inca warrior Rumiñahui at the head of the Atahualpa army: “les faltará cordel para atarnos’. Upflifting colour and words.

The airport.

The airport. Photo M Nuku.

 

Oswaldo Guayasamín mural

Oswaldo Guayasamín mural. Photo M Nuku.

Rumiñahui

Rumiñahui

Hasta pronto España! we hope to see you again soon.

Maia Nuku

Francois and Julie consulting Montague's journal

Francois and Julie consulting Montague’s journal. Photo Ali Clark.

In October, the project invited archaeologist Francois Wadra to Cambridge. Wadra and I have been working together for several years researching Kanak collections in UK museum collections and I was very keen for him to examine and comment upon a particular collection made in 1914 by the Cambridge zoologist, Paul Montague. Together we spent ten days looking through Montague’s objects as well as the vast array of associated archival documentation. Wadra was of the opinion that the Montague collection was unique in terms of the level of information he recorded about the use of the objects as well as the circumstances of their collection. Montague was meticulous in noting down local names and locations and became particularly interested in the so-called ‘magic stones’, which played a major role in all aspects of Kanak life. Coincidentally, Wadra himself has a particular interest in these stones and wrote an essay about the British Museum’s collection in the recently published: Melanesia – Art and Encounter (2013).

 

Ross (NMS), Francois and Julie looking at a Kanak pot

Ross (NMS), Francois and Julie looking at a Kanak pot. Photo Ali Clark.

After working through the Montague collection, we undertook visits to see the Kanak collections at the Horniman Museum in London, the Manchester Museum, the Museum fur Volkenkunde in Leiden and the Musee du quai Branly in Paris. Here we continued our work documenting Kanak collections in the UK and began to situate them within the context of European museum collections. In a Parisian café, I recorded an interview with Wadra, which will be published as part of a book about missionary collections. Our work in the Netherlands and Paris was documented visually by the New Zealand photographer, Mark Adams. He produced a series of portraits of Wadra examining the collections and also visiting the major exhibition of Kanak art which had recently opened at the Musee du quai Branly.

 

Francois at the Horniman Museum Stores

Francois at the Horniman Museum Stores. Photo Julie Adams.

Wadra’s visit was the first made by a Pacific Islander as part of the project and was incredibly rich and rewarding. Our work benefitted enormously from the fact that we had worked together previously and thus were quickly able to pick up our discussions and to hit the ground running! Projects like this are often only able to fund short, or one-off, research visits however I feel there is great rewards in building long-term collaborations. Hopefully these benefits will be made tangible as the project moves forward in planning exhibitions relating to the Montague collection that will draw specifically on Wadra’s in-put.

By Julie Adams

Francois being interviewed by Radio Pays 93.1 for their series on Kanak culture

Francois being interviewed by Radio Pays 93.1 for their series on Kanak culture. Photo Julie Adams.

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