Bark Cloth Sample

Sleeping Cloth Fragment

97-120-417

From: United States of America | Hawaiian Islands | Oahu | Punalu'u

Curatorial Section: Oceanian

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Native Name Kapa Kea
Object Number 97-120-417
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Hawaiian
Provenience United States of America | Hawaiian Islands | Oahu | Punalu'u
Culture Area Oceania | Polynesia
Section Oceanian
Materials Paper-Mulberry Bark | Bark Cloth
Technique Beaten
Description

A white, rectangular sample of bark cloth made of wauke (paper mulberry). The sample was removed from a kapa kea (white bark cloth) measuring approximately 8 x 10.5 feet, present at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum. The kapa is referenced in William T. Brigham’s Ka Hana Kapa. A patterned bark beater with a niho liilii (small tooth) motif was used in its production, leaving visible markings in the cloth.

Kapa cloth is produced from the inner bark of a tree, typically wauke (paper mulberry), which is cultivated, harvested, and processed through soaking, scraping, fermenting, and repeated beating to form and refine the cloth. Patterned beaters may be used during production to create watermarks that can reflect regional styles or maker affiliations. After drying, the cloth is decorated using natural dyes and bamboo implements.

Kapa kea are bark cloth that are white in color. There are many different variations of white kapa. They were often utilized in ceremonies, as bedding and as clothing.

From the eighteenth century onward, European collectors and scholars frequently collected kapa, often removing small samples from larger textiles to facilitate transport, study, and comparison in museum and private collections, a practice especially common during and after Cook’s voyages in the Pacific.

Length 23 cm
Width 15 cm
Credit Line Gift of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1997
Other Number L-120-417 - Old Museum Number | 10496 - ANSP Number | 2614 - Bishop Museum Number

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