Skip to main content

言語を選択

ガイドにあなたの言語への翻訳がない場合、通常はGoogleによって翻訳されます。ただし、一部のガイドは元の言語のみで提供されています。

書き起こし

キャプション

  • A black human-like head with pronounced jaw, elongated head and white designs that replicate facial paint or tattoo markings presented with the words Arts of Oceania with a blue background.

Parrying shields

#1781

Aboriginal artists

19th century

Wood

解説

The complex designs laid into the surface of these finely modeled shields are a visual language that maps the ancestral landscapes on which they were made, and the individual and clan identities of their bearers. This graphic system varied among communities in southeast Australia, with each deploying a distinct name for their shields (such as mulka or drunmung). When fighting in land disputes, warriors used parrying shields to skillfully deflect blows from clubs. Men also carried and performed them during ceremonies to signal their clan affiliation and status.

1781. Parrying shields, Aboriginal artists

Uncle Brendan Kennedy

追加情報

クレジット
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Klejman, 1965
収蔵番号
1978.412.866, .868

ソフトウェア・ライセンス