visibility Similar

code Related

John Hayter - 'Govenor Boki of Oahu and his wife Liliha', pastel, c. 1860,

description

Summary

Govenor Boki of Oahu and his Wife Liliha, pastel drawing based on earlier work by John Hayter, c. 1860."In the main Polynesian room of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum at Honolulu, among the spears and the canoes and the surfboards, there hangs a double portrait. A young Hawaiian chief appears, clad in the feather cape and crested warrior's helmet of the ancient age. Close to his side stands a native woman in traditional dress. A garment of kapa is thrown loosely over her body, exposing her left breast. She wears a heavy necklet of braided human hair with a whale-tooth pendant. As artist's subjects, the two Hawaiians are perfect to the point of banality: physically imposing, firm-fleshed, and richly handsome. They look out from the portrait with a dignity that is pleasant enough, if faintly sentimental."[1]

label_outline

Tags

boki hawaiian chief braids in art hawaii in paintings hawaii in the 1820 s john hayter kuini liliha london in the 1820 s native hawaiians in art pastel paintings portrait age of discovery united kingdom
date_range

Date

1860
create

Source

Wikimedia Commons
link

Link

http://commons.wikimedia.org/
copyright

Copyright info

public domain

label_outline Explore Kuini Liliha, Boki Hawaiian Chief, London In The 1820 S

Topics

boki hawaiian chief braids in art hawaii in paintings hawaii in the 1820 s john hayter kuini liliha london in the 1820 s native hawaiians in art pastel paintings portrait age of discovery united kingdom