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bowl, ceremonial

human history
  • Other Name

    ceremonial bowl

  • Description

    Kwam is a ceremonial bowl traditionally made by women, using the spiral coil technique, on which men applied the decorative elements with paint and carved designs.

  • Place
  • Accession Number
    1973.67
  • Accession Date
    1973
  • Other Id

    46155 (ethnology)

  • Department

Images and documents

Images

Artefact

  • Credit Line
    Collection of Auckland Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira, 1973.67, 46155
  • Public Access Text

    Women have traditionally made the kwam, using the spiral coil technique, while the men applied the decorative elements with paint and carved designs. Some of the strict sanctions relating to the kwam are apparently no longer adhered to because this highly decorated type of vessel is now made for commercial sale, however restrictions concerning its manufacture continue to be adhered to.

    As important cult objects kwam were kept in the haus tambaran and used in yam cult activities and for feasts during ceremonial occasions. During their initiation period, young male initiates, eat only the ‘white soup’ made from coconut, taro and yams, served in the kwam. The entire surface of the bowl is decorated with patterns, figures and geometric designs. Kwam are always painted in red, black, yellow and white. The facial motif is variously considered to represent the face of ‘man’, but there appears here to be other stylised representations which may be of nggwal (ancestral spirits), or the spirit ngwalandu (butterfly), the white cockatoo, wama, or the black cockatoo, mange. Traditional dyes were occurred naturally, black was obtained from charcoal, white from river stones, red either from a paste from the red seeds of a shrub, Bixa orellana, from river stones or from the burned stem of a tree that grows near water, and yellow from clay. This vessel is part of a large representative collection of contemporary pottery and pot making tools made in 1972 as requested by the then Auckland Institute and Museum. Field notes pertaining to this collection and photographs taken at the time of manufacture are held in the Auckland Museum Library.

  • Cultural Origin
  • Primary Maker
  • Place
  • Date
    Unknown
  • Media
  • Measurement Reading

    255 x 285mm (This object was measured as part of a Light Sensitivity gallery survey, undertaken by Sabine Weik in G62 Pacific Masterpieces gallery, on 20.2.2015 (MPH 29/10/2015).)

  • Classification
  • Last Update
    11 Oct 2018
The development of the Auckland War Memorial Museum online collection is an ongoing process; updates, new images and records are added weekly. In some cases, records have yet to be confirmed by Museum staff, and there could be mistakes or omissions in the information provided.

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