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Rare Pacific artefacts return to Southern Hemisphere
Rare artefacts collected on Captain James Cook's Pacific voyages
have returned to the Southern Hemisphere for the first time in 220
years and are on show in an exhibition opening today at the National
Museum of Australia in Canberra.
The National Museum is the exclusive Australian venue for Cook's Pacific Encounters, an exhibition of 350 exquisite objects, featuring some of the last Pacific artefacts untouched by European influence. This is the world's largest identifiable collection of artefacts
collected on Cook's voyages and the objects, rich in craftsmanship and
spiritual power, were given as gifts or traded by indigenous people
from locations including Tonga, Tahiti, New Zealand and Hawaii.
Highlights include a feathered chief's helmet, a shell trumpet, a full
mourning dress and a boar's tusk bracelet.
These musical instruments, jewellery, clothing, weapons and tools
have been held at the Georg-August University of Göttingen in Germany.
Rarely seen by the general public, the collection was shown at the
Honolulu Academy of Arts earlier this year. The National Museum
exhibition presents additional Cook material held in Australian
collections and highlights Cook's role in the wider Pacific.
'Cook's reputation extends well beyond Australia and was largely
based on his experiences in the wider Pacific,' National Museum
director Craddock Morton said. 'This exhibition is a chance to deepen
our understanding of his extraordinary encounters as an explorer of
rich human cultures.'
This collection was acquired by Cook and his crew members, along
with German naturalists Johann Reinhold Forster and his son, Georg. It
was assembled at the Georg-August University by Enlightenment scholar
Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, who used the royal connection between
Hanover and the British Crown to acquire the Pacific objects. The
Cook-Forster collection will return to Germany after the Canberra
showing.
Cook's Pacific Encounters was organised by the Honolulu Academy
of Arts in association with the Institute of Cultural and Social
Anthropology at the University of Göttingen and Art Exhibitions
Australia. The principal exhibition sponsor is Singapore Airlines. The
exhibition is also sponsored by Prime Television. Cook's Pacific Encounters
was made possible by Art Indemnity Australia, an Australian Government
program through which the Commonwealth acts as insurer in case of any
loss or damage to an indemnified work of art. Without Art Indemnity
Australia, the high cost of commercial insurance would prohibit this
major exhibition from touring to Australia.
Cook's Pacific Encounters is on show at the National Museum of
Australia's Temporary Exhibition Gallery from 1 July to 10 September.
Entry is: $10 adult, $8 concession, $4 child, $22 family. |