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Conceptually similar
AR9641361 
AR9641363 
AR9641347 
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AR9641356 
Head of a wooden tiki stela, 164cm tall, acquired by the Papeete Museum in 1928, from the Taipivai Valley, on Nuku Hiva, Marquesas Islands, in the Musee de Tahiti et des Iles, or Te Fare Manaha, at Punaauia, on the island of Tahiti, in the Windward Islands, Society Islands, French Polynesia. Tikis are protective statues representing Ti’i, a half-human half-god ancestor who is believed to be the first man. The Museum of Tahiti and the Islands was opened in 1974 and displays collections of nature and anthropology, habitations and artefacts, social and religious life and the history of French Polynesia. Picture by Manuel Cohen 
Unique Identifier AR9641362 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 6496px × 7087px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
Ancestor
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
Collection
color
Education
FIGURE
FRENCH POLYNESIA
guardian
Head
Iles de la Societe
IMAGE
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
Island
marquesas islands
MUSEUM
Oceania
Pacific Ocean
Polynesia
Sculpture
society islands
square image
Statue
STELA
Stele
tahiti
TAHITIAN
TIKI
TOURISM
Tourist Attraction
Travel
Windward Islands
Wood
wooden