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Art of Leilehua Yuen
Na Ipu - Hawaiian Gourds

 


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Useful and Beautiful

     Gourds in ancient days served as water containers, bowls, boxes, ladles, bailers, and many other household necessities.
  
   In ancient times, gourds generally  were left undecorated, although the koko (carrrying nets) were often highly ornamental. Certain of the more decorative knots, in fact, were kapu (reserved for the use of) to royalty and any commoner caught using them would be executed. When they were decorated, a variety of methods were used depending on the resources and customs of the district. 
     In the Kona district of Hawai'i Island, woodburning techniques apparantly were used to decorate gourds. James King wrote of the gourds he saw, "They have. . . a method of scoring them with a heated instrument, so as to give them the appearance of being painted, in a variety of neat and elegant designs. . ." 
     On O`ahu, gourds were stained in patterns, possibly in a method similar to that used on Kaua`i. The skin was scraped from the shell in the areas which were to be colored. The gourd was then soaked in dye of the desired color. After the color had soaked into the shell, the gourd was removed from the solution and dried. Then the skin was scraped off, leaving a pattern of dyed and natural colors. The gourd then was wrapped in ti leaves and steamed in an imu to set the color.
      The gourd utensils Capt. James Cook saw at Waimea, Kaua'i were, he said, stained "prettily with undulated lines, triangles, and other figures of a black color; instances of which we saw practiced at New Zealand." Cook also noted that the Hawaiians had apparantly developed technology for creating varnishes, "for some of these stained gourd shells are covered with a kind of lacker [sic]. . ." 
     On Ni'ihau, after the designs were carved into the skin, the gourds were said to have been buried in black mud. The native iron compounds in the earth possibly reacted with tannins in the gourd, creating black and dark reddish-brown patterns. The people of Ni'ihau called their geometric designs "pawehe", using the term for both the gourd patterns and the designs woven into their exquisite mats.

Gourd hanging containers Leilehua  crafted for Pu`uhonua o Honaunau 
National Historical Park


The "tatooed" gourds of Hawai`i were decorated using a technique called pawehe, in which the skin of the still-living gourd is incised and dyes forced into the flesh. Artist's personal collection.   

To purchase or commission gourd items, contact the artist.

 

 

 

 

 

 


  
  
 


Traditional Crafting

   Leilehua Yuen (right) with her gourd tool box and traditional tools.
   Leilehua enjoys crafting her works using the ancient style tool. "I feel it puts me in closer contact with the people who created these art forms," she says. 
   Among the tools she uses are stone saws, coral rasps, and bone and bamboo knives. Fish hide and leaves make various types of sand papers.



Here, Leilehua demonstrates cutting open an ipu using a stone saw.
Pawehe - 
The Tatooed 
Gourds

    
 


   `Ehu Yuen carves the skin from a gourd in preperation for using the pawehe technique to create a modern design.
   `Ehu assisted her mother, artist Leilehua Yuen, in much of her mother's early research in pawehe.

 




 

   Here, the gourd is ready to be filled with dye. It will be kept full for several months, and as the gourd respires, the dye will be carried through the skin, staining the hard rind

No dye transferance took place where the skin had been removed, so the scarified area remained pale. This early experiment became an ipu heke which is currently in a private collection.
Another early experiment in pawehe. This one is in the collection of Bishop Museum's Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden, for which Leilehua has done many talks and demonstrations.


 

 



Visit the gallery of Leilehua's affordable Hsie-I style watercolor paintings.
Leilehua also enjoys ipu as subjects for her other art.



Hand painted greeting cards are a joy to send, recieve, and own.
Order Leilehua's Ipu Watercolor Paintings
on T-shirts, mousepads, and more!