
Cleveland Museum of Art
Neck Pendant (Hei-tiki)
- Date
- 1800s
- Medium
- Greenstone (pounamu) (nephrite?)
- Culture
- Pacific Islands, Polynesia, New Zealand, Māori people
- Department
- Oceania
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Among the Māori, leaders are hereditary and imbued with mana, power and prestige that can be embodied and passed down in the artworks associated with them. Hei-tiki are among these treasured, mana-charged heirlooms, which connect the living to ancestors of the islands’ pre-European past. They may represent Hine-te-Iwaiwa, a legendary ancestress who is the exemplar of Māori womanhood and the patron of childbirth. Hei-tiki may represent Hine-te-Iwaiwa, a legendary ancestress who is the exemplar of Māori womanhood.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
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