ETHOC 025333

trois colliers

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025333
Necklaces
French Polynesia, Society Islands, Huahine
First half of the 20th century
Shell, plant fibre. H 194 cm, 196 cm, 214 cm
Gift of Edgar Aubert de la Rüe in 1956
MEG Inv. ETHOC 025333
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These necklaces are still used today as a sign of appreciation and thanks. In June 2009, a group of twenty-two children and five adults from Ra'ivavae, a small island in French Polynesia, spent some time in Geneva on their trip to Europe. At the end of their visit to the MEG, they gave these necklaces to the museum staff who had made them welcome.

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French Polynesia

French Polynesia, an overseas collectivity of the French Republic, is composed of about 118 volcanic or coral islands, grouped in five archipelagos: the Society Islands, the Marquesas Islands, the Austral Islands, the Gambier Islands and the Tuamotu Islands.

Despite their political ties to France, the people of these archipelagos have and express a strong sense of their Polynesian identity.

Signs of rank, power and prestige

Works from this part of the world give us the opportunity to address the issues of power and prestige and show the communicative capacity of art. Ornamental objects such as jewellery and accessories, as well as weapons, can become status symbols and reveal the codes that distinguish human beings, signalling the gender, age group and rank of the wearer.


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