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Osonifei (navigation spirit)
Not on view
For centuries, Micronesians have used canoes to ply the seas surrounding the more than six hundred islands distributed across 1,700 miles in the Western Pacific Ocean that make up the Federated States of Micronesia, an independent republic associated with the United States. Their distinctive wa, or sailing canoes, are said to be a gift from a heavenly spirit. Expert navigators relied on their knowledge of the winds and weather, ocean currents, astronomy, and the protection of osonifei, special navigation spirit effigies, as they made their voyages, some hundreds of miles in distance. Canoe voyaging in the region continues today.These figures, imbued with incantations and prayers, offered protection for the navigator from the dangers of the ocean. Portable and small but with strong manaman, or cosmic force and power to aid the mariner, osonifei were secured to the canoe’s rigging or placed for safekeeping in a navigator hut located on the outrigger platform when not in use.Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, de Young 125 (California: Cameron + Company, 2021), p. 146, entry by Christina Hellmich.
- Artist
- Onoun
- Title
- Osonifei (navigation spirit)
- Date
- 19th century
- Place of Creation
- Namonuito
- Object Type
- Sculpture
- Medium
- Wood, stingray spines, coconut palm leaves, barnacle, red clay, coconut fiber sennit, pigment, and lime plaster
- Dimensions
- 16 x 2 1/2 (40.6 x 6.4 cm)
- Credit Line
- Museum purchase, M.H. de Young Memorial Museum
- Accession Number
- 26168
Currently on view
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