Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-nlwjb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-08T16:04:37.882Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ethnographic collections in Northern Ireland and the Solomon Islands tomako (canoe) at the Ulster Museum, 1898–2023

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 February 2024

Briony Widdis*
Affiliation:
Queen's University, Belfast
*
*Queen's University, Belfast, briony.widdis@qub.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The World Cultures collection at National Museums Northern Ireland is an essential source for the study of Irish collecting in the wider British Empire. The 2022 redisplay of the collection in the Ulster Museum's exhibition, Inclusive Global Histories, is part of a staged engagement with local and source communities. Given the critical importance of the global museum decolonisation work of which the exhibition is an example, a fresh consideration of this ethnographic collection's history is timely. This article reviews the collection within the context of the three museums that have housed it, and investigates how curators within the institution understood, represented and displayed the collection. It does so through a case study of a war canoe (tomako), that was taken from the Solomon Islands, by John Casement, a captain in the Royal Navy, and is the largest and among the most significant items within the collection. The canoe's centrality to the gallery — built around it in 1925 — that now contains Inclusive Global Histories reveals complex social networks between nineteenth- and twentieth-century collectors, curators and photographers, and aids understanding of how global human cultures have been regarded in Northern Ireland's civic life.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd
Figure 0

Figure 1. Displays at the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum on Royal Avenue, described in the 1923-5 Report of the Committee of the Public Art Gallery and Museums. c.1925, Robert Welch. By courtesy of National Museums NI. BELUM.Y.W.10.21.244

Figure 1

Figure 2. ‘Ascent of Man’ case, Belfast Museum and Art Gallery. Robert Welch, 1929. By courtesy of National Museums NI. BELUM.Y.W.10.79.46

Figure 2

Figures 3–4. The canoe in December 2015 and June 2019 in the ‘boat room’ at the Ulster Museum. In the first, the canoe is just visible behind an exhibition of local photographs. In the second, which is taken from the other end of the gallery, it is behind a temporary exhibition of Irish maps. Author by courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 3

Figures 5-6. The tomako as currently displayed in Inclusive Global Histories, with its label. Author by courtesy of National Museums NI.

Figure 4

Figure 7. Earliest known surviving photograph of the Solomon Islands canoe, taken by Robert Welch in April 1908, in the rooms on the top floor of the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum (labelled on the image as the Belfast Public Museum, now the Belfast Central Library). By courtesy of National Museums N.I. BELUM.Y.W.10.21.245.

Figure 5

Figure 8. Postcard produced using the photo in fig. 7. 1908. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 6

Figure 9. Label (c.1908) still attached to the canoe. Author by courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 7

Figure 10. The canoe in the Grainger Room in the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery (Belfast Public Museum) on Royal Avenue. W. A. Green, c.1910–15. HOYFM.WAG.3785. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 8

Figure 11. November 1925, Belfast Museum and Art Gallery, Botanic Gardens. Robert Welch. BELUM.Y.W.10.79.31. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 9

Figure 12. May 1928. Belfast Museum and Art Gallery, Botanic Gardens. The canoe is photographed from the opposite end as Fig.11. Robert Welch. BELUM.Y.W.10.79.32. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 10

Figure 13. c. 1929. The canoe in the same gallery, showing the Portadown dugout canoe hung below, surrounded by other ethnographic material and Edens Osborne's bicycles. BELUM.Y.W.10.79.34. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.

Figure 11

Figure 14. The canoe in the same gallery, showing Edens Osborne's bicycles, Irish harps and other items. c.1939. boatroom_lookingsouth29. By courtesy of National Museums N.I.