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Throwing Board - Image 1
Throwing Board - Image 2
Throwing Board - Image 3
Public Domain

Possibly Yup'ik and Possibly Iñupiaq

Throwing Board

Inuit, 1900-1932

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Throwing Board

Inuit, 1900-1932

Physical Qualities Wood, walrus ivory, pigment, 19 11/16 in (approx.). (50 cm.)
Credit Line John Erikson Collection
Object Number 1955.167.5
Like their ancestors, Iñupiaq and Yup’ik artists of the 19th century adorned utilitarian objects with carvings. Hunters used implements like the harpoon point with a circle-and-dot pattern and the throwing board to hunt sea mammals. This throwing board effectively lengthened the hunter’s arm, so that the harpoon or dart resting in the groove was launched with greater power, speed, and distance. The animals carved in ivory here reveal the deep relationship between the hunter and the hunted and reflect the hunter’s respect.
Purchased by John Erikson in Alaska ca 1900
Darienne Turner, The Baltimore Museum of Art, “Arctic Artistry”, July 17, 2022-January 8, 2023.

BMA, Vitrines, May Wing, Summer 1957.

Inscribed: white label with red border, red ink, BMA receipt number: '3245-11'

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1600
Henri Matisse
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1928