3906

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    Large Ifugao Carved Wooden Ritual Bowl (Duyu)

    Ifugao People, Northern Luzon, Philippines
    19th century

    width: approximately 38cm, height: approximately 11cm, weight: 2,150g

    Available Enquire

    Provenance

    private European collection.

    This bowl, carved from a single piece of wood, was used to serve food and wine. It has a dark patina and a smoothness borne from use and handling. The patina also has been developed by the bowl being rubbed with animal fats after each meal to help protect the vessel, which in combination with soot from the hearth gives such bowls their characteristic dark colour. The interior of the bowl does not have the same dark patina, which is also consistent with the bowl having been used – it is where food has settled, liquid has been absorbed into the wood, and utensils were scraped along the bottom.

    The bowl has been carved with a ring foot, and a thick rim with notched or crenulated indentations, which aided with drinking from the bowl. Moltzau Anderson (2010, p. 171) suggests that such bowls were communally used and that each individual had his or her own slot.

    Related examples were included in the Musee du Quai Branly ‘Philippines’ exhibition of 2013 are illustrated in Afableet al (2013, p. 178-179).

    The Ifugao people inhabit the mountainous provinces of northern Luzon island in the Philippines. The religious beliefs of the Ifugao are a complex structure of ancestor worship, animism and magical power. Numerous spiritual entities that represent natural elements, forces and phenomena, and ancestral and metaphysical beings are acknowledged, worshipped, appeased and appealed to. Generally the gods are seen as generous and benign beings who enjoy feasting, drinking wine and chewing betel nut, just as the tribes people themselves do. And so there is a blending of food and beverage serving vessels between the utilitarian and the ritual.

    The bowl is free of chips and repairs.

    References

    Afable, P., et al, Philippines: an Archipelago of Exchange, ACTES SUD/ Musee du Quai Branly, 2013.

    Casal, G. et al, The People and Art of the Philippines, UCLA Museum of Cultural History, 1981.

    Moltzau Anderson, E., In the Shape of Tradition: Indigenous Art of the Northern Philippines, C. Zwartenkot Art Books, 2010.

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