staff
staff
staff
An 18th century ceremonial dance wand with an incised horn or antler upper component and quill wrapped handle. Probably attributable to the Anishinaabe on the basis of the incised and quill-wrapped motifs. Formerly in the Leverian Museum in London where it was depicted in a watercolour by Sarah Stone, it was purchased in 1806 from Rowe (a parson from Bristol) at the sale of the Leverian Collection. Acquired in 1922 by the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, through Louis C. G. Clarke, who purchased it from Arthur Holdsworth at the Widdicombe House.
Based on style: the contrasting motifs on the two sides of the antler component are typical of Anishinaabe approaches to design.
Museum documentation and the GRASAC research team.
Read More About This Relative
wood; bone or antler; porcupine quillls, natural and dyed red and black; metal tinkle cones; woolen yarn tassels; woolen or hemp yarn braided and quillwrapped long tassels; ochre-painted hide
The handle, possibly made of bone or antler, is incised, There are long woolen or hemp tassels made of a complex braid, which may be commercial rope. The stem is quill-wrapped, and there is a wrap of hide under the quill wrapping and over the wooden stem. Some commercial linen thread is visible at each end of the quill wrapping.
On the bone or antler handle: incized zigzags on one side, x motifs on another side, parallel lines on final side, all lines enclosing dots. The wrapping has slipped out of original alignment and the patterns no longer clear but may have included thunderbird hourglass and stepped designs.
Ruth Phillips notes that the hourglass form in the quill wrapped portion was probably once clearer and probably related to thunderbird imagery. The zigzags on the antler may be power lines.
Most 18th century northeastern collections were made by the British military personnel in North America from the 1750s through to the early 19th century. This item was in the Leverian Museum at the end of the 18th century.
Provenance
Acquired by the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1922, through Louis C. G. Clarke, who purchased it from Arthur Holdsworth at the Widdicombe House. Previously in the Leverian Museum, it was purchased in 1806 from Rowe (a parson from Bristol) at the sale of the Leverian Collection.
See J.C.H. King, 'Woodlands art as depicted by Sarah Stone in the collection of Sir Ashton Lever,' American Indian Art Magazine 18(2) (1991), pp 35-45.
About This GRASAC Record
Unknown Anishinaabe artist, staff, for ceremonial dance?. Currently in the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 1922.976. Item photographed and described as part of a GRASAC research trip May 2009; GRASAC item id 25894.
This record was created as part of a GRASAC research trip to Cambridge University's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, May 4-9 2009.
Researchers present: Trudy Nicks, Stacey Loyer, Ruth Phillips, and Rachel Hand.