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Fiona Pardington : the pressure of sunlight falling /

By: Contributor(s): Language: English, Māori Language: English, mri Publication details: Dunedin, N.Z. : Otago University Press, 2011.Description: 160 pages : illustrations (some color), color map, portraits ; 35 cmISBN:
  • 9781877578090
  • 1877578096
Other title:
  • Pressure of sunlight falling
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
In search of the present: Fiona Pardington's Āhua / Kriselle Baker and Elizabeth Rankin -- Embossing the abyss: the work of Fiona Pardington / David Elliott -- The truth of lineage: time and tā moko / Kriselle Baker -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Dumont d'Urville and Dumoutier families -- Moulages du temps perdu: a voyage and its relics / Nicholas Thomas -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Gambier Islands (Mangareva), Hawaii, Samoa, Fiji, Solomon Islands -- Dumoutier's artifacts: a distant glimmer of ghosts / Yves le Fur -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Papua New Guinea -- Facing difference: casts as document and display / Elizabeth Rankin -- Documents, specimens, portraits: Dumoutier's Oceanic casts / Stacy L. Kamehiro -- He āhua tīpuna: faces of the ancestors / Ross Calman -- Kei tua o te aka = Beyond the husk / Ariana Tikao -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Aotearoa New Zealand -- Et la tēte: casting heads in the Pacific / Anne Salmond -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Timor, La Réunion, Madagascar, Mozambique -- Dramatis personae.
Summary: "An ambitious journey of the nineteenth century was the third voyage of the French explorer Dumont d'Urville, from 1837-1840. It was just before the invention of photography, when phrenology, the study of people's skulls, was the latest thing. D'Urville chose to take on the voyage an eminent phrenologist, Pierre-Marie Dumoutier, to preserve likenesses of people by making life casts. Fiona Pardington first learned of the life casts in 2007, which initiated a four-year project. It took her from Auckland to the Musée de l'Homme [in Paris], as she researched and photographed some of more than fifty casts of Māori, Pacific and European heads, including casts of her Ngāi Tahu ancestors"--Jacket flap.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Whitecliffe Library Oversize NZ & Pacific Oversize NZ&P TR 681 PAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 0008623

Published in association with the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery and Two Rooms Gallery ; and coincides with the opening of a major travelling exhibition.

Includes essays by leading scholars in Pacific history, art and photography, on subjects as diverse as phrenology and cast-making, the voyage, and the identity of Māori casts.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 154-157).

In search of the present: Fiona Pardington's Āhua / Kriselle Baker and Elizabeth Rankin -- Embossing the abyss: the work of Fiona Pardington / David Elliott -- The truth of lineage: time and tā moko / Kriselle Baker -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Dumont d'Urville and Dumoutier families -- Moulages du temps perdu: a voyage and its relics / Nicholas Thomas -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Gambier Islands (Mangareva), Hawaii, Samoa, Fiji, Solomon Islands -- Dumoutier's artifacts: a distant glimmer of ghosts / Yves le Fur -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Papua New Guinea -- Facing difference: casts as document and display / Elizabeth Rankin -- Documents, specimens, portraits: Dumoutier's Oceanic casts / Stacy L. Kamehiro -- He āhua tīpuna: faces of the ancestors / Ross Calman -- Kei tua o te aka = Beyond the husk / Ariana Tikao -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Aotearoa New Zealand -- Et la tēte: casting heads in the Pacific / Anne Salmond -- Images by Fiona Pardington: Timor, La Réunion, Madagascar, Mozambique -- Dramatis personae.

"An ambitious journey of the nineteenth century was the third voyage of the French explorer Dumont d'Urville, from 1837-1840. It was just before the invention of photography, when phrenology, the study of people's skulls, was the latest thing. D'Urville chose to take on the voyage an eminent phrenologist, Pierre-Marie Dumoutier, to preserve likenesses of people by making life casts. Fiona Pardington first learned of the life casts in 2007, which initiated a four-year project. It took her from Auckland to the Musée de l'Homme [in Paris], as she researched and photographed some of more than fifty casts of Māori, Pacific and European heads, including casts of her Ngāi Tahu ancestors"--Jacket flap.

In English with some Māori.

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