Description:

Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Borneo, Central Kalimantan, Iban Dayak peoples, ca. first half of the 20th century CE. A fine example of a hand-carved wooden charm rod known as a tun tun used to capture wild animals. This tun tun is covered with brown pigment and features a slender conical body surmounted by a stylized ancestral figure with a characteristic open mouth to convey the potency of their ferocious nature. Tun tuns were used to measure the necessary height of the impaling spike, and the ancestor atop the pole is symbolically meant to lure prey to the trap. Tun tun charms could also be placed at the four corners of an agricultural field to spiritually protect crops and plant growth. Size: 1.625" W x 16.8" H (4.1 cm x 42.7 cm)

Provenance: private Nevada, USA collection

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#152286

  • Condition: Wear to lower tip of pole body, minor nicks and abrasions to pole and figure, with a couple of stable fissures to figure, and fading to areas of original pigmentation. Nice traces of original patina and light earthen deposits throughout.

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January 30, 2020 8:00 AM MST
Louisville, CO, US

Artemis Fine Arts

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