MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,
slider-bg
more images

Would you like more images?

MALE FUNERAL MANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi Island,

6.800
20th century
Tribal Art
DELIVERY
From: 93400, Saint-Ouen, France

Change your address to get an accurate estimate of shipping costs.

    Item offered for sale by

    See the gallery
    This description has been translated and may not be completely accurate. Click here to see the original

    MALE FUNERALMANNEQUIN called Tau-Tau
    Toradja culture, Great Sunda Islands, Sulawesi, Indonesia
    Late 19th - early 20th century
    Jackfruit wood, pewter and pigments
    H. 132; L 31 cm

    Wooden anthropomorphic sculpture, carved standing, with removable forearms and hands outstretched in a gesture characteristic of Tau-Tau funerary sculptures.
    The oval head features a pair of almond-shaped eyes inlaid with pewter inserts - the circular pupils are enhanced with black pigments; an incised mouth with thin lips, a top of the skull that must once have been topped with a bun and eyebrows elegantly painted with black pigments.

    Jackfruit wood was reserved for sculptures of high dignitaries. The spiral body tattoos painted with black pigments on both calves also reflect the high social standing of the individual depicted.

    These effigies, regarded as funerary guardians, intercessors between heaven and earth and protectors of life and mankind, were placed at the entrances to cliffside tombs.
    Formerly dressed in full sarong dodo, baju to dolo jacket and seppa tallu buku breeches or kain mawa cloth, they could be either male or female - depending on the deceased depicted.
    A headdress or a head of hair could also cover the top of the figure's head. Mobile forearms made dressing easier.

    Tau means "person" or "man". The repetition Tau Tau refers to the idea of image combined with its resemblance to an identity. Thus, these statues are representations of deceased men and women - who could be animated by a priest's chanting. Indeed, following a ritual and a procession, the clothed mannequin received the soul of the deceased. It thus became more than a funerary portrait: a form of reincarnation of the living, even a deified ancestor, attaining the status of "deata".

    Provenance :

    Galerie Manfredi
    Private collection, Paris.
    On base.

    Text and photos © FCP CORIDON

    Code : 5070

    Ref: 6S1IXITRIP

    Condition Good
    Style Tribal Art (Oceanic Statues, Carving, Cult Figures of Tribal Art Style)
    Period 20th century (Oceanic Statues, Carving, Cult Figures 20th century)
    Country of origin Indonesia
    Shipping Time Ready to ship in 1 Business Day
    Location 93400, Saint-Ouen, France
    Antikeo Buyer Guarantee

    4 commitments to buy with confidence

    This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.