2008.58 Nobleman's necklace (kalabubu)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The small island of Nias, west of Sumatra and north of the Mentawai Islands, is known for its hierarchical society, elaborate feasts of merit (owasa), monumental commemorative stone sculpture, and boldly conceived objects of personal adornment, many worked from sheet gold.  This necklace represents the type called kalabubu, which once symbolized success, prestige, and honor for the Nias warrior.  The most familiar kalabubu is made of black coconut shell discs strung on brass wire.  This example, which is more unusual, features long segments of carved palmwood, also strung on brass wire.  The addition of thin sheet gold indicates ownership by a wealthy nobleman.  Here diamond-shaped cuts in the gold reveal a dark, polished wood core.  Delicately engraved triangles give texture to the burnished surface of the gold.  Gold signified not only wealth and status but also a connection to the supernatural.

Excerpt from
"Nobleman's necklace (kalabubu)," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Bonnie Pitman (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2012), 113.

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apply to objects where number equals 2008.58

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General Description
 
The small island of Nias, west of Sumatra and north of the Mentawai Islands, is known for its hierarchical society, elaborate feasts of merit (owasa), monumental commemorative stone sculpture, and boldly conceived objects of personal adornment, many worked from sheet gold.  This necklace represents the type called kalabubu, which once symbolized success, prestige, and honor for the Nias warrior.  The most familiar kalabubu is made of black coconut shell discs strung on brass wire.  This example, which is more unusual, features long segments of carved palmwood, also strung on brass wire.  The addition of thin sheet gold indicates ownership by a wealthy nobleman.  Here diamond-shaped cuts in the gold reveal a dark, polished wood core.  Delicately engraved triangles give texture to the burnished surface of the gold.  Gold signified not only wealth and status but also a connection to the supernatural.

Excerpt from
"Nobleman's necklace (kalabubu)," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Bonnie Pitman (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2012), 113.

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2008.58
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
necklaces: AAT: 300046001
%Archived
jewelry: AAT: 300209286
@Bilal-Gore
gold (metal): AAT: 300011021
prestige: AAT: 300343604
triangles (polygons): AAT: 300009806
diamonds (motifs): AAT: 300009791
brass (alloy): AAT: 300010946
*Arts of the Pacific Islands
warriors: AAT: 300261945
wire: AAT: 300011063
Ono Niha: DMA
Nias (island/Indonesia): TGN: 1008339
source file
object_notes_2_d-0483.xml.nores