Weeping Over A Deceased Chief

Artwork Information
Angas's description:
"PLATE XLV.
LAMENTATION OVER A DECEASED CHIEF.
ON the death of a chief, or any individual of rank amongst the New Zealanders, a great lamentation ensues, which is called a tangi. The women cut their arms and lacerate their breasts and faces in a dreadful manner, with the sharp and broken shells of the pipi or the mussel, until they become covered with blood. The dead body is laid out in state beneath the verandah of the dwelling, wrapped in the choicest mats; and the tail feathers of the huia are employed for decorating the hair of the deceased. This tangi frequently lasts several days, after which period the body is enclosed in a mausoleum of carved wood-work, or buried beneath an ornamental tomb, highly adorned with black and red paint and feathers. At the expiration of some months, or perhaps a year, the bones are raised, by the nearest relation of the deceased, and after being well scraped and cleaned are either deposited in an elevated box, or hid in a cavern known only to the Tohunga."
- Artist
- J W Giles, George French Angas
- Title
- Weeping Over A Deceased Chief
- Medium
- handcoloured lithograph
- Dimensions
- 251 x 355 mm
- Credit Line
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 1965
- Accession No
- 1965/14/5
- Copyright
- No known copyright restrictions
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display
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Motupoi Pah and Roto-aire Lake, Tongariro in the Distance
circa 1847

I. A Feast at Mata-Ta, on the East Coast. Mt Edgecumbe in the Distance II. Throwing the Spear, the Mode of Salutation. A Party of Visitors Arriving
1847
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