Open every day from 10am to 5pm
Artwork

The Tutu (Commonly Called Toot)

1845

The Tutu (Commonly Called Toot)

Artwork Information

'This shrub grows to the height of six or seven feet in the open country. Cattle are often poisoned by eating too freely of the plant. The seeds of the little berries which succeed this flower are highly poisonous; but the Natives make a wine from the berries, carefully straining the juice from the seeds. This wine is very sickly in taste.'

(Edward Jerningham Wakefield, Illustrations to Adventure in New Zealand from 1839 to 1844; with some account of the beginning of British colonization of the islands. Plate XIV, no.1).

Artist
Title
The Tutu (Commonly Called Toot)
Production Date
1845
Medium
hand-coloured lithograph
Dimensions
375 x 268 mm
Credit Line
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased with funds from the M A Serra Trust, 1987
Accession No
1987/16/14
Copyright
No known copyright restrictions
Department
New Zealand Art
Display Status
Not on display
Explore Connections (4)
Colour prints

Colour prints

399 Artworks

Flowers (plants)

Flowers (plants)

286 Artworks

Leaves

Leaves

170 Artworks

Tutu

Tutu

1 Artworks