22 September 2019

Situating Pacific Barkcloth in Time and Place

Today we have another project profile, this time from Frances Lennard.  If you wish to have a project, collection or object you are working on profiled on the MEG blog then please email web@museumethnographersgroup.org.uk  

Dr Mark Nesbitt, Dr Andy Mills and Dr Adrienne Kaeppler examining a rare Samoan upeti at Kew.
We have recently come to the end of a three-year research project on Pacific barkcloth, Situating Pacific Barkcloth in Time and Place, at the University of Glasgow, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The project grew out of long-standing relationships between the three project partners, the Centre for Textile Conservation and Technical Art History at the University, the Economic Botany Collection at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (EBC) and the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (NMNH). 

The three investigators: Prof Frances Lennard in Glasgow, Dr Mark Nesbitt at Kew and Dr Adrienne Kaeppler at NMNH, were keen to take a new approach to research into Pacific tapa. Investigation focused on barkcloth as a material, through a close examination of the objects in two collections, the University’s Hunterian Museum and Kew’s EBC, backed up by Adrienne Kaeppler’s previous research into the NMNH collections. 

The three project researchers came from different backgrounds: Pacific art historian, Dr Andy Mills, researched the provenance of the two collections and looked at the plants used to make barkcloth, drawing on historic cloths in other collections and working with tapa makers and botanists in the Pacific. Dr Margaret Smith, materials scientist, developed methods of identifying the plant species used to make barkcloth and carried out analysis of fibres and colourants in conjunction with other scientific specialists, while Misa Tamura, research conservator, carried out conservation treatment of the cloths, improved their storage and investigated tapa conservation techniques.  
Dr Margaret Smith using portable  X-ray fluorescence to identify inorganic pigments on a Hunterian barkcloth.

This interdisciplinary approach gave us new insights into the preparation and manufacture of barkcloth, showing how small changes in manufacturing techniques led to variations in cloth type. Historic records list many different plant sources but, interestingly, our research identified only a small number of colourants on the cloth in the two collections; this aligns with research into the British Museum and National Museums Scotland collections.
Reggie Meredith Fitiao demonstrating barkcloth
 beating during a workshop for conservators.

We were fortunate to be able to interact with many tapa makers, curators and conservators through workshops held at the Auckland War Memorial Museum, the Bishop Museum in Hawaii and here in Glasgow. We were delighted to welcome Reggie Meredith Fitiao and Uilisone Fitaiao, barkcloth practitioners from American Samoa, who led workshops on making and decorating tapa in Glasgow for conservators, project partners and students. 

Specific outcomes from the research are forthcoming – in the near future we will launch a new website which will contain information on barkcloth and a searchable database of the Hunterian and Kew collections (https://tapa.gla.ac.uk is the address for both the existing and new websites). An edited volume with contributions from project partners and collaborators is also in preparation. An exhibition, Barkcloth: Revealing Pacific Craft, is at the Hunterian Museum at the University of Glasgow until 29 November.  As well as describing the research project and key findings, it gave us the opportunity to display some of the fine tapa cloths in the Hunterian collection for the first time, as well as some of the tools and other interesting botanical materials from the EBC.  

Misa Tamura treating a Hawaiian tiputa from Kew.
Further project funding from AHRC is allowing us to hold a series of barkcloth workshops for regional museum staff and for the public in museums around the country in April 2020. There will be more information about these on the project website and on twitter  (@UofG_Barkcloth).



All images © University of Glasgow



17 September 2019

Freelance opportunity: Buxton Museum and Art Gallery


Buxton Museum and Art Gallery is looking for help to identify ethnographic material and for advice on potential restitutions.  These objects were purchased between 1940 and 1988,  and were subsequently part of the Derbyshire Schools Library Service collections.

They are looking for people who can help identify objects from:
·       South Pacific (around 85 objects)
·       Africa (around 119 objects)
·       North America (around 33 objects)
·       Australia (around 26 objects)

The objects are located in Buxton, Derbyshire. You will need to travel to view the objects in person.
With the support of the Esmee Fairburn Collections Trust funding, they are able to offer a fee of £250 a day plus reasonable travel expenses.

The work needs to be carried out between October and December.

If you are able to help, please send a description of no more than 500 words detailing your relevant experience to Anna Rhodes anna.rhodes@derbyshire.gov.uk by 5pm on Friday 20th September. 

15 September 2019

World Cultures Curating workshop at the 2019 Museums Association conference, Brighton


Claire Wintle (University of Brighton) and Helen Mears (Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove) are hosting a workshop at the forthcoming Museums Association conference and would love for MEG members to join us!
 
The session will focus on “New Skills and Opportunities for World Cultures Curating” (Friday 4 Oct; 12:10-13:10, Brighton Centre Auditorium). Speakers include Rebecca Bridgman (Chair, SSN for Islamic Art and Material Culture), Christo Kefalas (World Cultures Curator, National Trust) and Rachael Minott (Curator of Anthropology (Social Practice), Horniman Museum) and facilitators include Megha Rajguru and Hajra Williams (both University of Brighton) and Rachel Heminway Hurst (Royal Pavilion & Museums). Findings from the session will be shared with the Museums Association, Arts Council England and the Museum Ethnographers Group.
 

Job: Curator/Senior Curator Americas or Oceania




Posted: 21/08/2019 11:57
Salary: £29,141 - £37,136 per annum
Location: National Museum Of Scotland, Chambers Street
Level: Collections Care/Conservation
Deadline: 23/09/2019 23:59
Hours: 37.00
Benefits: Membership of Civil Service pension scheme
Job Type: Permanent



Based at the National Museum of Scotland this permanent, full-time post will support the work of the World Cultures Department. Working within the Department’s Oceania, Americas and Africa Section, the post-holder’s duties will include responsibility for collections; acquisitions; exhibitions; research; publications; and answering public enquiries. Building on the major suite of new galleries in the National Museum of Scotland the post-holder will support development of the collection and displays.  Further details can be found on the NMS website.

Job: Curator/Senior Curator, Japan




Posted: 21/08/2019 12:14
Salary: £29,141 - £37,136 per annum
Location: National Museum Of Scotland, Chambers Street
Level: Collections Care/Conservation
Deadline: 19/09/2019 23:59
Hours: 37.00
Benefits: Membership of Civil Service pension scheme
Job Type: Permanent



Based at the National Museum of Scotland this permanent, full-time post will support the work of the World Cultures Department. Working within the Department’s East and Central Asia Section, the post-holder’s duties will include responsibility for collections; acquisitions; exhibitions; research; publications; and answering public enquiries. Building on the major suite of new galleries in the National Museum of Scotland the post-holder will support development of the collection and displays.  Further details can be found on the NMS website.

New exhibition reveals the Pacific craft of barkcloth


GLAHM:E.458/3 - Barkcloth, Fiji, Melanesia, 1700 – 1860.

A new exhibition opening at the University of Glasgow’s Hunterian Museum this August highlights The Hunterian’s world-class collection of barkcloth from the Pacific Ocean.

Barkcloth:Revealing Pacific Craft showcases some of The Hunterian’s outstanding and decorative examples of tapa and reveals the fascinating process of how it is made.

The exhibition features cloths from Fiji, Hawaii and Samoa, some of which are newly restored and on display for the first time. Also on show are items from the voyages of Captain Cook and the world’s earliest example of barkcloth from the small island-nation of Niue, donated to The Hunterian by the Presbyterian missionary Reverend George Turner.

Barkcloth: Revealing Pacific Craft is the result of a major three-year research project, Situating Pacific Barkcloth in Time and Place, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Based at the University of Glasgow’s Centre for Textile Conservation and Technical Art History, the project connected The Hunterian collection with those of research partners at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and the National Museum of Natural History, part of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

Little was known about The Hunterian tapa collection prior to the project but the research, which combined methods of material science, conservation, anthropology and art history, has clarified the provenance of most of the pieces and has revealed new scientific findings about the production, trading and use of barkcloth.

Visitors will learn about the processes of making and decorating barkcloth and its uses, as well as the different plants used in its production and how they have been identified. They will also discover how the artefacts came into The Hunterian collection and the conservation challenges they posed.

Barkcloth: Revealing Pacific Craft is at the Hunterian Museum, University of Glasgow, from 29 August – 29 November 2019. Admission is free.
Barkcloth: Revealing Pacific Craft
29 August – 29 November 2019
Hunterian Museum
Admission free