Visions of an Enduring World: Jacoulet and the People of OceaniaMain MenuIntroduction: The Pacific Islands and Paul JacouletDisappearing ParadiseAdornments of ParadiseLeisure of ParadiseCloseness to NatureBibliographyUSC Pacific Asia Museumd5c1cdb8968a27aeb8620e4c0c5fc7e36e111c30
WATER VESSEL
12020-10-09T11:11:56-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e381503Vanuatu Coconut shell wrapped in vegetable fiber rope and marked with white paint Gift of Harlan Givelber 1990.53.39plain2020-12-24T12:12:42-08:00-17.734818,168.322021USC Pacific Asia Museumd5c1cdb8968a27aeb8620e4c0c5fc7e36e111c30
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12020-10-12T11:36:21-07:00USC Pacific Asia Museumd5c1cdb8968a27aeb8620e4c0c5fc7e36e111c30Introduction: The Pacific Islands and Paul JacouletUSC Pacific Asia Museum22google_maps2020-12-24T13:23:22-08:00USC Pacific Asia Museumd5c1cdb8968a27aeb8620e4c0c5fc7e36e111c30
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12020-10-12T11:43:53-07:00Aesthetic versus Utility6plain2020-12-17T15:45:32-08:00Jacoulet’s work focuses on the details of language, clothing, adornments, and physiognomy that detail the complex cultures of the Pacific, capturing ethnographic and historical images of Pacific people and occasionally the objects they use daily. Objects of use in the Pacific were often produced with great intention, some bearing designs and motifs with a religious and spiritual nature. Yet in Jacoulet’s portraits these objects are often absent or become purely ornamental, furthering Jacoulet’s aesthetic ideals of paradisal leisure.
How do you think the aesthetic objects in Jacoulet’s portraits compare to original material objects of the Pacific Islands?
VENDEUSE DE MANGUES. MARIANES (MANGO SELLER) Paul Jacoulet Japan, c. 1939 Woodblock print Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Child 1982.133.19
WATER VESSEL Vanuatu Coconut shell wrapped in vegetable fiber rope and marked with white paint Gift of Harlan Givelber 1990.53.39