Login Home
WEB CATALOG ......All Categories -- Click any image to see more JEWELRY & Accessories ARCHIVE SAILOR or PRISONER-OF-WAR Wood Folk Carving
Advanced Search
View Slideshow

ARCHIVE

1. HANGING... ... 404. TWIN PEARLS... 405. NAVAJO... 406. HARDSTONE... 407. SAILOR or... 408. 1923 DATED,... 409. FRENCH CUT ... 410. WATERMELON ... ... 890. TWO COLORS ...

SAILOR or PRISONER-OF-WAR Wood Folk Carving

SAILOR or PRISONER-OF-WAR WOOD FOLK CARVING, with two Andaman Islands type Standing Figures (strongly resembling natives photographed by Maurice Vidal Portman [1860-1935])----ref, KELIWA, a Woman of the Ta-keda Tribe, Andaman Islands, in The Magazine Antiques, March, 2010, p 60.

Overall Length of the carved wood is 24” x 2-1/4” wide x 3/8” thick – all measurements approximate – due to age and hand-made nature it is not precisely symmetrical.
Low-relief carved with geometric figures above and below the standing figures, in natural and contrast-darkened wood; center of the long rectangle is further carved with plus and minus signs. Edges of the stick are canted and darkened. Two holes for attachment are drilled near each end.

The ELL. We think this long narrow flat plaque may have been designed as an “ELL” stick, posted in the 19th century by families engaged in weaving or textile manufacture.
An ancient unit of measurement used in England, Europe and North America before standardization, the Ell was used as late as the 1880's. The Ell varied in length – locally and over time – from as little as 21” to as much as 46”.
Traveling agents carried a canelike ell wand for inspecting or buying; shops or home weavers had an ell-stick of flat form attached to a counter or wall, where they used it to check bolt width and for measuring lengths to cut.

The ANDAMAN ISLANDS, in the Indian Ocean between the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea, were briefly colonized by the British from 1789 to 1796, and more permanently from 1858 until the Japanese invasion in World War II. The British used the Islands as an isolated prison for members of the Indian independence movement. The capitol city, Port Blair, was known as the “Siberia” of British India.
A native of the Andaman Islands plays a role in one of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories.

# 3006 .............................................. SOLD

Size: 12 items
SOLD

SOLD

Views: 830
Upper Figure, detail

Upper Figure, detail

Views: 952
Lower Figure

Lower Figure

nearly identical to" KELIWA, a Woman of the Ta-keda Tribe, Andaman Islands", photographed by Maurice Portman about 1893

Views: 965
Full length

Full length

Views: 2023
KELIWA, a Woman of the Ta-keda Tribe, Andaman Islands

KELIWA, a Woman of the Ta-keda Tribe, Andaman Islands

Photograph, about 1893, by Maurice Vidal Portman

Views: 1696
Side View shows low relief carving

Side View shows low relief carving

Views: 1095
'Diamonds' checkerboard section

'Diamonds' checkerboard section

Views: 1083
Lower Half

Lower Half

Views: 1015
Lower Figure, detail

Lower Figure, detail

Views: 973
Verso, end

Verso, end

Views: 988
Verso, one end

Verso, one end

Views: 949
Center

Center

Views: 1070
Page: 1