Showing posts with label Cook voyage collections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cook voyage collections. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 May 2021

Labelling Matters: The Cook Collection: Euphemisms and Omitted Contexts

The Cook collection on display at the Pitt Rivers Museum ©  Pitt Rivers Museum

 “Coloniality is what the narratives hide or disguise because it cannot be said explicitly” - Walter D. Mignolo

The advent of globalization came with a promise of happiness, innovation and scientific discovery for mankind. The price paid: a continuous and ever growing appropriation of resources, labour and mental subjection of those people falling outside this pledge. It is in the paradox of trying to realize a universalist vision of human progress through the abuse of part of humankind that the workings of coloniality are captured.

 

In pursuit of personal gain, colonial administrations actively obscured violent exploitation of peoples by presenting morally deplorable practices as aspects of a larger scheme of development. Uprooting political, economic, cultural and educational systems was justified as being part of a civilizing mission. Colonial rulers repeatedly advertised colonial missions as a responsibility and burden of white Europeans to bring civilization to mankind. It masked their true motives: economic profit and power.   

 

Masking motives, omitting contextual details and the subversion of truths are all mechanisms of coloniality that have evolved into standard practices now deeply rooted in Western practices and institutions. Euphemism became an important linguistic tool to veil injustices as well as to bend truths to fit the promise of progress. These euphemisms live forth in modern discourses and ought to be addressed in order to successfully eradicate the mechanisms and legacies of coloniality that run through society. 

 

The collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum are not immune to the workings of coloniality and have been shaped through an imperialist lens. To illustrate, the early colonial missions are consistently referred to as ‘voyages’ and ‘expeditions’ to emphasize this aspect of newness, endless possibility and scientific discovery that worked well upon the imaginations of Europeans. Such terminology obscures ulterior motives behind these missions.

 

Let us zoom into one such case of euphemism and omission. The Pitt Rivers Museum houses a vast collection of artefacts from Cook’s voyages to the Pacific between 1768 and 1775. It is right to state that these tours on the Endeavour, the Resolution and Adventure were in part motivated by scientific objectives. One of the main organisers, The Royal Society, an institute for the promotion of scientific research, co-organized these missions with the Admiralty, which at the time was a separate branch of the British government concerned with naval affairs. However, the Admiralty’s motives for involvement extended well beyond the promise of science. Recent studies place Cook’s Pacific ‘voyages’ in a different light, not describing Cook as one of Britain's greatest ‘explorers/adventurers’ but rather as a problematic figure who laid the roots for colonialism.

 

It has come to light that Cook, on orders of the Admiralty, deliberately reported false information and left out crucial discoveries in his records to keep strategic advantages over other imperial powers. It has recently been argued, on the basis of reports from both Cook himself and from people aboard the Endeavor, that Cook deliberately hid the existence of a strait separating modern day Australia from Tasmania, instead mapping what was then called Van Diemen’s Land as a peninsula. Additionally, it should be noted that nine indigenous people were killed during Cook’s first encounter with Maori who had lived in New Zealand (then Aotearoa) for centuries. It could thus be said that positive connotations underlying notions such as ‘expedition, explorer, and voyage’ are used euphemistically to obscure narratives of coloniality. Such terms conceivably fit the initial objective of universal progress, however, by placing these tours in its wider context it becomes evident that conflicts of interests underlie the so-called Cook voyages. Therefore, further contextualization is needed to fill narrative gaps and to settle on more adequate terminology.


Interpretation panel for the Cook display ©  Pitt Rivers Museum
 
The object labels addressing Cook’s travels to the Pacific overemphasize its scientific purposes whilst not mentioning the strive for influence in the area. The contextual details provided in the Cook displays mainly address his scientific observations, the flourishing of trade between voyagers and islanders and the friendly nature of these encounters. What comes to light is a narrative in line with the promise of progress. As seen above it is dangerous to assume a direct link between Cook’s voyages and universal progress. His scientific discoveries were soon used as tools of power causing power imbalances. 

 

In conclusion, it is not right to simply state that ‘expeditions’ and ‘explorations’ such as Cook’s voyages preceded the arrival of colonial powers. They were itself in part an expression of coloniality. Through euphemisms and by omitting contextual details in the museum’s object labels, colonial legacies remain intact and are reinforced. The Labelling Matters project is thus not limited to the identification of derogatory language use but also inquires into that which is not said explicitly. Paradoxically, it is perhaps within the embellishing narrative and the realm of silences that historical truth resides. 


By Jip Borm

Labelling Matters project Intern

Masters Student, University of Leiden

Wednesday, 28 January 2015

Caring for the Collections

Work at the Museum stores continued throughout the cold and gloomy winter months. Collections and conservation staff are systematically improving the storage of vulnerable collections and those things considered difficult to move and access in their current storage. We replace old boxes with new conservation grade materials. To this end we have completed the arrows project, re-storing and locating all arrows in storage, adzes and axes have been moved to larger shelves and we are now working on mats and fibre clothing.


Mats retrieved from storage in the conservation lab for humidification
© Pitt Rivers Museum 
Tubing cut to size to roll mats onto © Pitt Rivers Museum

The Museum has a good collection of mats from all over the world, which are currently stored rolled on shelves on movable racking. When the racking is moved to access collections behind or in front of the mats the mats are at risk of falling off the shelving or being squashed. The solution to this is to store the mats rolled on tubing which can be easily removed from brackets on the shelves. We have been taking the mats back to the Museum so that Senior Conservator, Jeremy Uden can humidify the mats, check their condition and eventually roll them onto the tubing once the tubes have been cut to size.

Unwrapping a Malaysian mat; 1940.3.028 (above and below) 
© Pitt Rivers Museum
Sometimes at the store we come across objects wrapped in brown paper packaging, often the packaging that the object came to the Museum in the first instance in. Unwrapping the brown paper is exciting for us. Last week we unwrapped a fabulous mat and pillow from Malaysia. The mat is richly embroidered with silk and sequins and belonged to the Sultan Idris.






Detail of embroidery on Malay mat © Pitt Rivers Museum

Plant fibre fringed skirt in new box
© Pitt Rivers Museum
Whilst or technical team work on constructing the new storage unit for the mats we have been working through the fibre clothing including many grass skirts from Polynesia, Japanese fibre rain capes and African masquerade costume. The fibre clothing is made from grasses, palm leaves, bark and other plant material. This material gets very brittle over time and becomes delicate and fragile. These items of clothing were often worn and danced and used, they were not supposed to last forever by their very nature. Given the age of the some of the pieces and the distances they have travelled to be in the collections they are in remarkably good condition. The re-storage project will involve moving the clothing to larger custom made Corex boxes. We have already discovered an important fibre skirt from Captain Cook's voyages to the Pacific which had been previously un-located.





Plant fibre skirt from Tahiti, Forster 36, 1886.1.1179 © Pitt Rivers Museum
Custom made Corex boxes filled with plant fibre clothing 
© Pitt Rivers Museum

Conservation grade standard sized boxes for 
smaller garments © Pitt Rivers Museum 

Fibre clothing laid out on the table at store for cataloguing (above and below) 
© Pitt Rivers Museum


Custom Corex boxes on store shelves © Pitt Rivers Museum 

Faye Belsey & Jeremy Uden
Assistant Curator & Senior Conservator

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

De-installing Joseph Banks, A Great Endeavour: A Lincolnshire Gentleman and His Legacy


The Pitt Rivers Museum (PRM) loans objects to temporary exhibitions hosted at museums all around the world. Most recently we loaned 19 objects from Captain Cook's voyages to the Pacific. The PRM's Cook collections were collected by Joseph Banks, who was the botanist and naturalist on Cook's first voyage aboard the Endeavour, and Johann Reinhold Forster and Johann George Adam Forster, the two naturalists on Cook's second voyage aboard the ship Resolution. Banks sent objects collected on the voyage to his old Oxford college Christ ChurchThe collection was presumably housed at the college's Anatomy School, for which Banks's old undergraduate friend John Parsons had responsibility. In 1860 most of the collection was transferred on loan to the newly founded University Museum, and from there to the Pitt Rivers Collection where it arrived in the mid-1880s. 


Joseph Banks was born to William Banks, a wealthy Lincolnshire country squire. His link to Lincolnshire led to The Collection in Lincoln holding the exhibition Joseph Banks, A Great Endeavour: A Lincolnshire Gentleman and His Legacy. The exhibition included Cook collection objects alongside diary and journal entries and accounts from the time of the voyage and original drawings and paintings loaned by The British Museum, The Natural History Museum and the British Library among others. 


Objects crated up as the exhibition is taken down © Pitt Rivers Museum

Preparing to remove the fau, 1886.1.1683 from its display case © Pitt Rivers Museum



Many hours of work by collections and conservation staff go in to preparing objects for loan. To prepare objects for loan the PRM conservation team have to agree that the objects chosen are in good enough condition to travel and sometimes custom crates need to be made to accommodate the objects being loaned. Included in the 19 objects from the PRM selected for the exhibition was a large wickerwork and feather headdress called a fau (1886.1.1683) from Tahiti. The fau needed an extra large crate and display case to allow enough space in the case for the protruding tropicbird feathers. 

Staff from the collections team have to prepare loan agreements, arrange for photography of the objects being loaned and administration regarding transport and insurance. I also check that the cataloguing of the objects is up-to-date. When at the venue, the objects are condition checked by the PRM couriers before installing and deinstalling the objects from display. The exhibition proved very popular and after just over three months of display in Lincoln I went back the The Collection with Senior Conservator, Jeremy Uden to de-install the loan and return the objects to Oxford. 


Jeremy Uden, senior conservator condition checking objects 
before packing them in crates.  © Pitt Rivers Museum

PRM crates loaded into the truck for the return trip to Oxford © Pitt Rivers Museum





For more information about the Cook collections at the PRM please visit our new Cook Voyage Collections website. 

Faye Belsey
Assistant Curator