- Toas
"Toas" are small composite and painted artefacts made by members of the Diyari and collected by Lutheran Missionary Johann Reuther at the Killalpaninna Mission in South Australia beginning in 1904.
Reuther claimed they were use as 'signposts' on vacating a camp to tell those following where they had gone. Each "toas" thus represented a particular place, by way of its carved shape and painted detail. In 1906 Reuther retired from the mission and sold 385 "toas" to the [http://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/aacg/speakingland/story06/06_module.htm South Australlian Museum] (images of "toas") for £400. They probably have more in common with 'marker pegs' than
message stick s.The "toas" combined Aboriginal and European technologies and were made within a frontier context at the mission. They often used gypsum as substrate for painting and incorporating object such as shells, gypsum paste also hid European methods of joining pieces of wood which provided the armature. Gypsum was often used in Aboriginal mourning ceremonies.
While there is no doubt the manufacture and form of the "toas" are of Aboriginal creation and that they mythologically encode place names, it is suggested that they were made at the mission in response to an easy supply of surplus gypsum and the active interest of an inquiring German missionary. As such they are now regarded as precursors of the Western Desert Painting Movement.
The origin of the word "toas" for these objects is probably an idiosyncratic usage by Reuther, perhaps in a mission pidgin, extending terms (from the Bilatapa language as well as of Diyari) which imply burying, covering up, inserting, or sticking into the ground.
Less generous commentators have said that Reuther was just setting himself up with an exit fund by supplying authentic Aboriginal artefacts to an under-supplied market.
The names of those who may have have had a role in producing the "toas" are Petrus or Peter Pinnaru, Emil Kintalakadi, Elias Palkalinna (Diari), Elisha Tjerkalina (Diari), Andreas Dibana, Johannes Pingilina (Diari), Moses (Tirari), Titus (Diari) and Joseph Ngantajlina (Diari Lake Hope).
References
Jones, Phillip G. (2007). "Ochre and rust : artefacts and encounters on Australian frontiers" Kent Town, S. Aust., Wakefield Press. ISBN 9781862545854
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