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SAM'S collection
Ceremonial entrance panel
Ceremonial entrance panel

Ceremonial entrance panel

Label TextPerilous entrance Douglas Newton, an esteemed curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, was traveling with the collector when this entrance panel from the Sawos people, of the Sepik River of New Guinea, was purchased. In writing about the experience, he expressed an opinion that Sepik River art has a particular leaning toward "the numinous, the awesome and the terrifying." He advocates realizing that not all art is meant to be likeable and cites an essay from 1757 by the philosopher Edmund Burke that considers "the roots of the sublime to be horror, fear, astonishment, and terror, as they are inspired in art by such masters as the Greek dramatists, Shakespeare, Michelangelo, and Milton." What the Sawos philosophers would have to say about this panel-and the observations it inspired-has not been recorded.
Object number81.17.1458
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, The Untold Story, November 14, 2003 - November 14, 2004
Credit LineGift of Katherine White and the Boeing Company
Dimensions60 5/8 x 14 5/8 x 3 1/4 in. (154 x 37.15 x 8.26 cm)
MediumWood, pigment, and fiber
Paddle
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1442
Food bowl
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1447
Ancestor board
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1453
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1484
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1501
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1477
Stool
Object number: 81.17.979
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1457
Photo: Susan Cole
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1469