Art in Theory. Группа авторов

Art in Theory - Группа авторов


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manage them with one hand; the most common form was quadrangular, so as to make a rhomboid at the broad end, and gradually tapering into a round handle at the other. But many were spatulated, flattish, and pointed: some had long handles and a blade which resembled the blade of a fleam; others were crooked, knobbed, &c. But by far the greatest part were carved all over in many chequered patterns, which seemed to have required a long space of time, and incredible patience, especially when we consider, that a sharp stone, or a piece of coral, are the only tools which the natives can employ in this kind of work. All the different compartments were wrought and divided with a regularity which quite surprised us, and the whole surface of the plain clubs was as highly polished, as if our best workmen had made them with the best instruments.

      The stone statues of Easter Island have some claim to be among the most striking works of non‐European art encountered on any of the eighteenth‐century voyages of exploration. Although they had been seen from the sea by the Dutch navigator Roggeveen, Cook’s crew were the first to encounter them at close quarters. It is telling, however, that George Forster, precisely because they are figurative, and hence approach the territory of ‘Art’, is inclined to a negative judgement. Whereas the baskets and clubs he saw at Tonga would stand comparison with the best of European artisanal workmanship, Forster feels that any European artist would be ‘ashamed’ of the Easter Island stone figures for their lack of mimetic fidelity. However, a little further on in his account, Forster’s sympathy for the hardships of life on Easter Island leads him to a more positive assessment of some other, smaller, figurative works in wood which, he concedes, may show a glimmering of a ‘taste for the arts’. As he notes in conclusion, one of them, a lifelike carving of a human hand, was subsequently deposited by his father in the collection of the British Museum. ‘Mahine’, who is mentioned in this connection, was a young Tahitian who joined the Resolution in September 1773 intending to travel to England. In the event he sailed to New Zealand, Easter Island and the Marquesas, but left the ship when it returned to Tahiti in June 1774. A large painting of the stone statues by the voyage artist, William Hodges, who accompanied Forster and others around the island to make a visual record, is now in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, London. This extract is taken from George Forster, A Voyage Round the World [1777], edited by Nicholas Thomas and Oliver Berghof, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2000, vol. 1, pp. 305–6, 309–10 and 312–14.

      About sun‐set we left the watering‐place, and walked to the cove where our boat lay at a grapnel. In our way we passed over the area on which the single pillar before‐mentioned was placed. A few natives who still accompanied us, made signs that we should descend, and walk in the grass at the foot of the pedestal; but seeing that we did not care to understand their gestures, they made no other attempt to oppose our progress. We put some questions to the most intelligent persons among them, concerning the nature of these stones, and from what we could understand, we concluded that they were monuments erected to the memory of some of their areekees, or kings … To the westward of the cove, there was a range of three pillars, standing on a very large elevated area or pedestal. This range the natives distinguished by the name of hanga‐roa, and the single pillar they called obeena. About ten or twelve people were seated at a little distance from the last, round a small fire, over which they had roasted a few potatoes. These served for their supper, and they offered us some of them as we passed by. We were much surprised with this instance of hospitality in so poor a country, especially when we compared it to the customs of civilized nations, who have almost entirely laid aside all tender feelings for the wants of their fellow‐creatures. […]

      By a series of extraordinary coincidences, the baby claimed by an early biographer to have been born on a slave ship during the Middle Passage from Africa to the Caribbean (but who was more probably born in Africa itself) became first a manservant to the duke of Montagu and second, a significant figure in literary and artistic London during the late eighteenth century. Already a published author of four collections of music, towards the end of his life Ignatius Sancho became celebrated for his letter‐writing, both to friends, privately, and to newspapers, and a prominent figure in the first stirrings of the movement to abolish slavery in British colonies. He was, that is to say, a man of ‘sentiment’ rather than a ‘noble savage’, the still‐prevalent stereotype for people of colour at that time. His collected letters, bearing on their frontispiece an engraving after his portrait by Gainsborough, were published within two years of his death. The first, and arguably most significant letter was to Laurence Sterne,


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