African & Oceanic Art | Antiquities - 8th June 2021

Lot 549

A Marqueses Islands U'u war club

Estimate £20,000 - £30,000 | Hammer £24000

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Description

A Marqueses Islands U'u war club

Polynesia

with relief carved tiki heads, faces and geometric motifs, the cylindrical shaft with a phallic terminal, 19th century,

137cm long.

Provenance

Lt. Col. George H. Lambert (born 1877)

Given to the present owners family by the above family, early 1950's.

Lt Col Lambert was from the family of Lambert & Co, Silversmiths, London.

Made of ironwood, casuarina equisetifolia, and known as toa by Marquesans, a very dense, hard wood, the u'u' clubs were placed in the mud of taro fields and then polished with coconut oil to obtain the rich dark patina. Bound with sennit around the base of the handle and with human hair or feathers. The hair usually being that of relatives.

The curved crutch like top was so that the owner could put it under his arm and lean on it. The owner would have been a high ranking and important person in Marquesan society, a leader in warfare, also known as toa. Above these warriors in Marquesan society would have only been chiefs and priests.

The carving of these u'u' clubs resulted in a traditional form throughout the late 18th and through the 1840's, but no two have the exact same decoration, making each an incredible personal symbol of owners' relationship with his ancestors. Paul Gaugin wrote of Marquesan art 'always the same thing but never the same thing' and the clubs are certainly true of this observation. The head of the club has two sides, with concave and curved planes with relief carving. The main image represents a large human face, made up from the two tiki heads within striated circles as the eyes and brows above, and another tiki head below the eyes as the nose. Below this stylised head are three distinct rows, two of stylised geometric motifs and a pair of eyes. The panels above these eyes have two arm-like lines running from the circles within the panels to the mouth of the 'nose' tiki. Either side of the main 'eyes' to the edges are two more faces and another on the top edge. There are at least fourteen faces on this club, which are thought to draw on the sacred powers of the ancestors, giving the owner protection in warfare. With all these stylised faces the warrior owner of this club had 'eyes' looking in four directions.