This definitive source on the intricate tattoos of Polynesia's Marquesas
Islands offers a rare glimpse of a dying art. Because of the colonial
authorities' 1884 ban on tattooing, there remained only a single
surviving tattoo artist at the time of this 1921 survey -- and a
dwindling number of living examples. These 38 plates of black-and-white
drawings and photographs provide an unusually complete and intimate
record of a sophisticated art form.
The Marquesas consist of a dozen rugged volcanic islands that lie 1,000
miles northeast of Tahiti. Rich in oral traditions, folklore, and
decorative arts, their complex culture was devastated by the intrusions
of outsiders during the nineteenth century. In the early 1920s, Hawaii's
Bishop Museum sponsored an expedition to preserve what was left of the
islanders' vanishing world. Willowdean Chatterson Handy, an expedition
associate, created this priceless record of the ancient body art
rituals. In addition to detailed information about tattoo methods and
customs, Handy's account features fascinating insights into the designs'
symbolic significance and their representation of social status. Her
painstaking drawings of tattoo patterns are accompanied by captions that
explain the traditional motifs.