We acknowledge the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Art Gallery of NSW stands.

Title

Sacred stone (club head)

circa 6000 BCE-circa 1000 BCE
collected 1969

Artists

Unknown Artist

No image
  • Details

    Other Titles
    Club head
    Ritual stone
    Place where the work was made
    Tegibo Southern Highlands Province Papua New Guinea
    Cultural origin
    Woala (Wola) people
    Dates
    circa 6000 BCE-circa 1000 BCE
    collected 1969
    Media category
    Ceremonial object
    Materials used
    stone, hammer-pecked with 12 stars, red pigment
    Dimensions
    8.5 cm diameter; 5.0 cm width
    Credit
    Gift of Stan Moriarty 1977
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    565.1979
    Copyright
    © Wola people, under the endorsement of the Pacific Islands Museums Association's (PIMA) Code of Ethics
    Share
  • About

    Cults associated with sacred stones were once prevalent throughout the highlands. Sacred stones included oddly shaped river rocks or unearthed objects created by ancient highlands cultures, such as mortars, pestles, club heads and zoomorphic figurines. Ancestral and other spirits resided in these earthly forms, establishing a direct link with the spiritual world. The Enga people believed sacred stones were handed down from the 'sky people' who came to earth and created mankind; others thought they were the petrified bones of the ancestors. Stored in ritual houses or buried at sacred sites, stones were 'fed' the blood or fat of pigs on ritual occasions.

    Archaeologists believe prehistoric stone mortars were used to grind seeds and nuts for nourishment, and pigments for ceremonies.

    [Exhibition text for 'Plumes and pearlshells: art of the New Guinea highlands', AGNSW, 2014]

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 1 exhibition

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 1 publication