Luli dera (ancestor figure)
Speaking the name of the ancestor who is represented by this figure is potentially dangerous, for it is the act of naming that calls the spiritual entity into the carving and brings them into the present. In Southwest Maluku, the act of storytelling is what brings reality into being – a reality that must be harnessed and controlled by whoever named it. Symbols, metaphors, thematic devices, and proverbs are used throughout many artforms in the Malukus, including woven textiles and creation narratives. Each symbol (rou) is given its own name (ktunu) and with that name comes an entire story that takes shape as a narrated reality in the present. The naming of this sculpture functions in the same way and it, too, would have been allocated a name. However, these carvings were largely destroyed or sold when much of Southwest Maluku converted to Christianity, and their names have not been spoken or passed down (rendering them inert and safe to view). Many sources refer to these sculptures as iene (or yene in Indonesian), which is a Letinese word that prohibits an action. In this case, it implies the name of this statue cannot be given. Letinese professor and linguist Aone van Engelenhoven suggests the name iene was possibly misunderstood by early collectors to be the name of this genre of carvings – a name that has been perpetuated in museum records. The term luli dera may be more applicable, for it refers more broadly to a male sacred entity, therefore avoiding any direct reference to the statue and the person it embodies.
Referencesvan Engelenhoven, Aone. Recorded conversation with the MET Digital and Curatorial teams. 21 November 2022.
Artwork Details
- Title: Luli dera (ancestor figure)
- Artist: Leti Islands artist
- Date: 19th–early 20th century
- Geography: Indonesia, Leti Islands, Maluku Tenggara
- Culture: Leti Islands
- Medium: Wood
- Dimensions: H. 12 3/4 in. × W. 4 in. × D. 3 1/4 in. (32.4 × 10.2 × 8.3 cm)
- Classification: Wood-Sculpture
- Credit Line: Gift of Fred and Rita Richman, 1987
- Object Number: 1987.453.5
- Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
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