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Pā ipu

human history
  • Other Name

    Gourd plate (English)

  • Description

    Pā ipu. Gourd plate. A low bowl with a wide diametre. Its surface colour varies in orange tones. The interior is rough and speckled with holes made by mū (worms). These can also be seen upon the exterior of the pā ipu. The exterior is smooth and the piko (centre/stem attachment) is visibly raised inwards. The rim of the pā ipu shows cracks. It is light in weight to handle and its low form would have been used to present or serve food.

  • Place
  • Accession Date
    1894
  • Other Id

    11396 (ethnology)

  • Department
dish, 11396, Photographed by Denise Baynham, digital, 23 Mar… … Read more

Images and documents

Images

Artefact

  • Credit Line
    Collection of Auckland Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira, 11396
  • Public Access Text

    The shape and size of an ipū can define its use such as the containment of food and water. This is Pā ipū, it is made from the base of a large gourd and portrays the form of a Pā (plate). Its low and wide shape show its use for presenting food .

    Ipū is a term commonly associated with the gourd. It has been intentionally cultivated and hollowed. Ipū have a hollistic role within Hawaiian history and culture. Physically, the ipū can be used to carry mea’ai (food) and ka wai (water) or to store personal items. They can also be used to produce kani (sound) for mele (song) and hula (dance). Spiritually the ipū also have a significant metaphoric presence in procreation stories.

    There are two kinds of ipū: Ipū nui are a large variety of gourd and are associated with carrying food or water in contrast to Ipū awa awa which are the bitter variety of gourd. These are more suitable for holding goods or made for use as instruments in Hula. As one knowledge holder explained, “The Hawaiian people – we had 42 different uses for the ipū” – the most described across Polynesia.

    There are other qualities that extend the physical use of ipū into the realm of the cosmological and the spiritual. The late Indigenous Hawaiian scholar and historian, Samuel Kamakau (1815-1876) portrays the cosmological role ipū played in the creation story through an exert published in ‘Ke Au Okoa’,

    “It was thus that Papa gave birth: she gave birth to a gourd, a calabash with its cover, ‘he ‘umeke a he po‘i; Wākea threw the cover up, and it became the sky; then Wākea threw out the inner core, ‘ka haku oloko’, and it became the sun; as he threw it up, the seeds became stars. Wākea saw the whiteness of the soft core, the ‘pala haku’, of the gourd and threw that up, and it became the moon; the white layer, ‘papa ke‘oke‘o’, of the gourd Wākea scraped and threw up into space and it became clouds; the juice of the gourd he poured into the clouds, and it became rain. The calabash from the seperation of the gourd by Wākea became land and ocean.” (Oct. 14, 21, 1869)

    Papa is the earth mother, and Wākea is the sky father. The story of them birthing a gourd and using its contents to create the heavens and the earth illustrates the abundance that ipū have continued to offer today. Whether this is through domestic use, cultural performance or cosmological stories, the ipū has continued to carry Hawai’i’s rich history and culture.

    We would like to give thanks to the Hawaiian knowledge holders who generously shared their mana`o and sources surrounding the significance of the ipū.

    FURTHER READING:

    • M.Beckwith, ‘Hawaiian Mythology’. U H Press. 1970.

    • Jenkins, ‘The Hawaiian Calabash’.Editions limited. 1989.

    • T.R.Hiroa, ‘Arts and Crafts of Hawaii’. Bishop Museum Press. 1957.

    • S.M.Kamakau, ‘Tails and Traditions of the People of Old|Nā Mo‘olelo a ka Po‘e Kahiko’. Bishop Museum Press. 1991.

    • Personal comms. Kumu Auli`i Mitchell. 14.03.2018

    GLOSSARY:

    • Pā ipū (Gourd plate)

    • Pā (plate)

    • Kani (sound)

    • Mele (song)

    • Hula (dance)

    • Mea‘ai (food)

    • Ka wai (water)

  • Cultural Origin
  • Primary Maker

     Unknown (Maker)

  • Place
  • Date
    Pre 1894
  • Technique
  • Media
  • Measurement Reading

    359mm

    80mm

  • Subject Category
  • Classification
  • Last Update
    25 Jul 2018
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