Pestle Finial

ca. 1500 BCE– ?1600 CE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 354
This stylized bird figure once adorned the end of a stone pestle. Almost certainly used in conjunction with the prehistoric stone mortars found in the same region, such pestles may have been ritual objects—possibly used to grind pigments used for body paint or in the preparation of ceremonial meals.


The earliest known works of Oceanic sculpture are a series of ancient stone figures unearthed in various locations on the island of New Guinea, primarily in the mountainous highlands of the interior. To date, no examples have been excavated from a secure archaeological context. Although organic material trapped within a crack in one example has recently been dated to 1500 B.C., firm dating and chronology for the figures are otherwise lacking.

The stone sculptures fall into three basic categories: mortars, pestles, and freestanding figures. The tops of many pestles are adorned with images of human heads, birds, or bird's heads. The mortars display similar anthropomorphic and avian imagery as well as geometric motifs. Freestanding figures include depictions of humans, birds, and phalluses, as well as long-nosed animals that some scholars identify as echidnas (spiny mammals resembling hedgehogs). While the original significance and function of these stone images remain unknown, they possibly represent totemic species or ancestors and were likely used in ritual contexts. When found by contemporary New Guinea peoples, these early stone sculptures are often thought to be of supernatural origin and are reused in a variety of religious contexts, from fertility rituals to hunting magic and sorcery.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Pestle Finial
  • Date: ca. 1500 BCE– ?1600 CE
  • Geography: Papua New Guinea, Highlands, Komun River region
  • Culture: Highlands, Mt. Hagen region
  • Medium: Stone
  • Dimensions: H. 4 1/2 × W. 2 1/2 × D. 2 7/16 in. (11.4 × 6.4 × 6.2 cm)
  • Classification: Stone-Implements
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Discovery Communications Inc. Gift, 1996
  • Object Number: 1996.373.1
  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

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