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Art Blackburn
Art Blackburn
Home
New Acquisitions
NATIVE AMERICAN
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Oceanic Fine Marquesan Island Fan Handle Ke'e
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Fine Marquesan Island Fan Handle Ke'e

$17,500.00

1820 - 1840

Height 12 1/4"

Provenance: Australia trade

Fans in the Marquesas were carried by prominent individuals of both sexes as marks of social status. Displayed at feasts and other events, their visual impact was enhanced by the elegant manner in which they were carried, especially by women. Made from narrow strips of plant fiber, the blades were woven around dagger-like wood handles (ke'e), sometimes sheathed in a sleeve of bone. The earliest fan handles were apparently unadorned, but by the early 1800s, artists began to decorate them with numerous small tiki (human images). Typically arranged in pairs, shown back-to-back and stacked one atop the other, these tiki, like human images elsewhere in Marquesan art, likely portray deified ancestors. A superb example of great artistic merit.

INQUIRE HERE

Purchase

1820 - 1840

Height 12 1/4"

Provenance: Australia trade

Fans in the Marquesas were carried by prominent individuals of both sexes as marks of social status. Displayed at feasts and other events, their visual impact was enhanced by the elegant manner in which they were carried, especially by women. Made from narrow strips of plant fiber, the blades were woven around dagger-like wood handles (ke'e), sometimes sheathed in a sleeve of bone. The earliest fan handles were apparently unadorned, but by the early 1800s, artists began to decorate them with numerous small tiki (human images). Typically arranged in pairs, shown back-to-back and stacked one atop the other, these tiki, like human images elsewhere in Marquesan art, likely portray deified ancestors. A superb example of great artistic merit.

INQUIRE HERE

1820 - 1840

Height 12 1/4"

Provenance: Australia trade

Fans in the Marquesas were carried by prominent individuals of both sexes as marks of social status. Displayed at feasts and other events, their visual impact was enhanced by the elegant manner in which they were carried, especially by women. Made from narrow strips of plant fiber, the blades were woven around dagger-like wood handles (ke'e), sometimes sheathed in a sleeve of bone. The earliest fan handles were apparently unadorned, but by the early 1800s, artists began to decorate them with numerous small tiki (human images). Typically arranged in pairs, shown back-to-back and stacked one atop the other, these tiki, like human images elsewhere in Marquesan art, likely portray deified ancestors. A superb example of great artistic merit.

INQUIRE HERE

120 EAST EL PASO, P.O. BOX 485, MARFA, TEXAS 79843

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