Auction Closed
May 13, 03:32 PM GMT
Estimate
10,000 - 15,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
MAORI PENDANT (PEKAPEKA)
New Zealand, probably Rotorua, North Island
Greenstone
Width: 3 ¾ in (9.5 cm)
Hori Haupapa (circa 1793 - 1879), Rotorua
Rotohiko Tangonui Haupapa, Rotorua, by descent from the above, his fཧather
Nataria Rotohiko Mitchell (née Hau🌱papa), Rotorua𝄹, by descent from the above, her father
Hamuera Taiporutu Mitchell, Rotoru♉a, by descent from the 👍above, his mother
Marion Aroha Radcliffe-Taylor, Rotorua and💖 Rabaul, New Brit♑ain, acquired from the above
Harry A. Frankli🃏n, Beverly Hills, acquired from the 🔜above in 1970
PUBLISHED
George R. Ellis, Oceanic Art: A Celebration of Form, San Diego, 2009, p. 75, cat. no. 50
San Diego Museum of Art, Oceanic Art: A Celebration of Form, January 31, 2009 - January 3, 2010
The pekapeka is a rare form of Maori pendant, sometimes identified as an ear ornament. They exist in far fewer numbers than the celebrated hei tiki. Pekapeka is the Maori word for bat, to which the pendant bears a resemblance. The thin edges of this pendant readily catch the light, illuminating the outline of its looping forms and highlighting the beauty of the pounamu, which is of the famous kawakawa type.
The present pekapeka has a long provenance which ties it to members of the Ngāti Whakaue iwi of Rotorua, in the Bay of Plenty area of the North Island, its first recorded owner being the celebrated chief Hori Haupapa. In his later years Hori Haupapa was visited by the English ethnographer James Edge-Partington, who described him as a chief "formerly of great stature, and noted for his enormous strength." (Edge-Partington, Random Rot: A Journal of Three Years’ Wanderings about the World, Altrincham, 1883, p. 372-373). Roger Nei🐠ch, the scholar of Maori art, knew a numꦉber of the later owners of this pendant personally.