Gateway Post

P2244A

From: New Zealand | North Island | Bay of Plenty Region | Ōpōtiki

Curatorial Section: Oceanian

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Native Name Amo
Object Number P2244A
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Maori
Provenience New Zealand | North Island | Bay of Plenty Region | Ōpōtiki
Period Te Huringa I Period
Date Made 1800 - 1900 CE
Section Oceanian
Materials Wood | Pigment
Description

An amo (bargeboard support post) made of one piece of wood. One side is decorated with four curved wheku (carved face that depicts an ancestor) figures on one half, with the other half being the side of a human figure decorated in puwerewere (spider) and Whakaironui Whare-pūngāwerewere (house of the spider) spirals. The other side of the amo is undecorated.

An amo is a bargeboard support post on the front of a wharenui (meeting house) or waharoa (gateway). These posts are both functional and symbolic, carved with ancestral figures and motifs representing tribal identity and spiritual beliefs.

As noted by the collector, William O. Oldman, this amo was part of a wharoa (gateway) at a pā near Ōpōtiki.

Length 246 cm
Width 54.5 cm
Credit Line Purchased from W. O. Oldman; Subscription of Herbert L. Clark in memory of Edward W. Clark, 1911
Other Number 21392 - Dealer's Number | 31 - Other Number | 45.1380 - Other Number

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