ETHOC K000411

echantillion de tapa

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K000411
Sample of tapa
Hawaiian Islands
Late 18th century
Bark of the paper mulberry tree (Broussonetia papyrifera), pigments
Gift of the naturalist Henri de Saussure to the Archaeology Museum in 1874; reputedly from James Cook's last voyage
MEG Inv. ETHOC K000411
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Strange objects and natural history

The first of what we now call “ethnographic objects” entered the Genevan collections in the 18th century, at a turning point in history. Around 1750, the ambition to construct scientific knowledge of the world competed with curiosity about strangeness. Voyages of exploration, maritime trade, evangelisation and colonisation facilitated the acquisition of souvenirs, trophies or collections.

The natural science of mankind

The young science of ethnography was modelled on the natural sciences. Specimens were studied and exchanged with other institutions to build up series. Peoples thought to be “in the early stages of civilisation” were studied in the same way as their natural environment.

Frontispiece of: Jean Nieuhof, Legatio batavia…or Ambassade de la Compagnie orientale des Provinces-Unies vers l’Empereur de la Chine… Amsterdam, 1668. ©Bibliothèque de Genève

Bibliograpy

  • , p. 97 et p. II b, XXXI
  • Brigham, William T.. 1911. Ta Hana Kapa, The making of Bark-Cloth in Hawaii. Honolulu :, p. 3

© 2021 Musée d'ethnographie, Genève