Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)

This article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These encompass the collections assembled by Johann Reinhold and Georg Forster and others on the famous voyages of James Cook to the South Seas at the end of the eighteenth century, but also objects collected...

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Main Author: Schindlbeck, Markus
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: International Association of Research Institutes in the History of Art (RIHA) 2018-07-01
Series:RIHA Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0194-schindlbeck
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author Schindlbeck, Markus
author_facet Schindlbeck, Markus
author_sort Schindlbeck, Markus
collection DOAJ
description This article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These encompass the collections assembled by Johann Reinhold and Georg Forster and others on the famous voyages of James Cook to the South Seas at the end of the eighteenth century, but also objects collected by the North American captain Hadlock at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Later a wide range of German visitors reported from their tours through New Zealand and brought back artefacts and photographs. This paper points out the provenances of the core areas of the Māori collection in Berlin and retraces some shifts in the collecting practices as well as in the museum installations. It will be shown how the perception and evaluation of these objects changed and how they became symbols of identity in the course of the nineteenth and twentieth century.
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spelling doaj.art-b7e2baa3a00e4038937166ddb1d169182023-11-02T03:59:43ZdeuInternational Association of Research Institutes in the History of Art (RIHA)RIHA Journal2190-33282018-07-010194Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)Schindlbeck, MarkusThis article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These encompass the collections assembled by Johann Reinhold and Georg Forster and others on the famous voyages of James Cook to the South Seas at the end of the eighteenth century, but also objects collected by the North American captain Hadlock at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Later a wide range of German visitors reported from their tours through New Zealand and brought back artefacts and photographs. This paper points out the provenances of the core areas of the Māori collection in Berlin and retraces some shifts in the collecting practices as well as in the museum installations. It will be shown how the perception and evaluation of these objects changed and how they became symbols of identity in the course of the nineteenth and twentieth century.https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0194-schindlbeckNew ZealandMaori CollectionJames CookGeorg ForsterMuseum für Völkerkunde BerlinEthnologisches Museum Berlin
spellingShingle Schindlbeck, Markus
Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
RIHA Journal
New Zealand
Maori Collection
James Cook
Georg Forster
Museum für Völkerkunde Berlin
Ethnologisches Museum Berlin
title Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
title_full Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
title_fullStr Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
title_full_unstemmed Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
title_short Curios and Taonga: Early Māori Collections in Berlin and Their Representation in the Museum für Völkerkunde (now Ethnologisches Museum)
title_sort curios and taonga early maori collections in berlin and their representation in the museum fur volkerkunde now ethnologisches museum
topic New Zealand
Maori Collection
James Cook
Georg Forster
Museum für Völkerkunde Berlin
Ethnologisches Museum Berlin
url https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0194-schindlbeck
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