2001.268.McD Standing figure


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
In Island Southeast Asia, wood sculpture rarely survives in its original setting for more than one or two hundred years. In the late 20th century, however, objects emerged in Kalimantan, in the Indonesian area of the island of Borneo, that seemed to be considerably earlier, deserving of the stylistic designation archaic. They were associated with rivers, with water and mud, an environment that both preserved them and modified them. This figure is one of those sculptures. The indigenous peoples who have lived in this region more recently have erected imposing figural sculptures at the edges of fields, on the banks of streams, at crossroads, and close to the longhouse. The figures serve to guard and protect the community from all manner of evil. This archaic sculpture probably served a similar purpose.

Adapted from
"Standing figure," 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), 114.

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apply to objects where number equals 2001.268.McD
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General Description
 
In Island Southeast Asia, wood sculpture rarely survives in its original setting for more than one or two hundred years. In the late 20th century, however, objects emerged in Kalimantan, in the Indonesian area of the island of Borneo, that seemed to be considerably earlier, deserving of the stylistic designation archaic. They were associated with rivers, with water and mud, an environment that both preserved them and modified them. This figure is one of those sculptures. The indigenous peoples who have lived in this region more recently have erected imposing figural sculptures at the edges of fields, on the banks of streams, at crossroads, and close to the longhouse. The figures serve to guard and protect the community from all manner of evil. This archaic sculpture probably served a similar purpose.

Adapted from
"Standing figure," 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), 114.

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Notes

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RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

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rules
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Objects
number
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2001.268.McD
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
standing: AAT: 300239500
%Archived
faces (animal or human components): AAT: 300251798
carving (processes): AAT: 300053149
@Bilal-Gore
apotropaic: DMA
hands (animal or human components): AAT: 300310193
ancestors: AAT: 300255718
protection: AAT: 300164923
animism: AAT: 300072604
*Arts of the Pacific Islands
Kalimantan Timur: TGN: 1001339
Dayak: DMA
ironwood: AAT: 300012172
source file
object_notes_2_d-0484.xml.nores