Panpipes and Clubs: Early Images of Tanna Islanders

Authors

  • Lamont Lindstom University of Tulsa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.129.1.7-28

Keywords:

island imagery, William Hodges, music, panpipes, clubs, Tanna, Vanuatu

Abstract

William Hodges, James Cook’s artist on his second voyage, produced notably popular and influential drawings and paintings. These included several illustrations of Tanna Islanders (Vanuatu) that shaped European visions of the island from the 1770s through the 1830s, after which they were supplanted by Christian missionary depictions. Influenced by neoclassicist artistic convention, Hodges’s engravings, which subsequently were much copied, commonly paired panpipes with clubs in islander hands. A chain of early engravings that feature panpipes and clubs reveals an initial heroic vision of natural island dignity, as both these accessories evoked European classical ideals. Although subsequent Christian and social evolutionary views later disavowed noble savage tropes, these persist in contemporary touristic appreciation of island musical talent and tradition.

Author Biography

Lamont Lindstom, University of Tulsa

Lamont Lindstrom, Kendall Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Tulsa, Oklahoma (USA) since 1978, has pursued a variety of ethnographic and linguistic research projects in Vanuatu, including on local knowledge systems, World War Two ethnohistory, the John Frum movement, contemporary chiefs, cultural policy and kava. His recent research focuses on the careers of early cinematographers Martin and Osa Johnson and on urban migration. A forthcoming book, Tanna Times: Islanders in the World, follows Tanna Island history and personalities from Captain James Cook’s 1774 visit up to the present.

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Published

2020-03-30