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You must join the virtual exhibition queue when you arrive. If capacity has been reached for the day, the queue will close early. Not on view. This remarkable sculptural vessel is exceptionally elegant in its design and ingenious for its formal inventiveness. It is not simply a work of decorative art; it is a vessel conceived as a vehicle to elicit contact with ancestral gods.
In a radical reinterpretation of form, the master carver who created it has fused the bold abstraction of a powerful physiognomy with the delicate contours of a receptacle. Despite its intimate scale, the looming ancestral figure exudes a powerful presence embodying the deep lineage of relations that were activated during its ritual use. Sacred vesi wood was used for high-status ceremonial objects and formed part of the ritual paraphernalia of Fijian priests who were charged with the dangerous duty of entering into communication with gods and spirits on behalf of their chiefs.
Delicately proportioned vessels of this kind were used to prepare and serve libations or to hold small amounts of sacred oil. Skillfully carved from a single block of wood, the shallow volume has been carefully hollowed to accommodate these liquids. The imbibing of the sacred yaqona plant in liquid form allowed the ancestor spirit to physically enter the body of the priest. Oil was used to anoint the body in preparation for the animated and highly physical ritual that involved the god taking possession of the priest.
Smoothed to a remarkable finish, the shallow curvature of the dish is remarkable given the hardness of the wood from which it is carved. When placed upright, the figure assumes an extraordinarily powerful presence.
Hollow eyes gaze directly ahead, lips gently parted, as if in a trance-like state echoing the context of its original use. The flat planar quality of the shallow vessel coupled with the bold volumetric head and corporeal presence create a formal tension at once dynamic and powerful. Above the concentrated brow of the ancestral figure is a simple raised ridge, likely a reference to the red and green feather headband worn by Fijian priests.