lunedì 26 aprile 2010

TIKI MASKS



"Hawaiian Tikis are spiritual figures who use their big, scary mouths and menacing expressions to frighten away evil. Their headdresses vary and have different meanings according to the shape. Each god assumed many different roles. For each role, they were perceived as particular and distinct gods, and had an epithet or specific name associated with each particular function. For example, the god Ku was Ku`ulakai or Ku of the sea's abundance when he was the god of fishing. As the god of war, he was Kuka`ilimoku, of Ku the snatcher of land.
ALOHA, TIKI DEFINITION : TIKI (TE'KE) Tiki Mythology. A male figure in Polynesian myth, sometimes identified as the first man.
A wooden or stone image of a Polynesian god.
A Maori figurine representing an ancestor, often intricately carved from greenstone and worn about the neck as a talisman."

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