For the local population, rice is the primary subsistence crop and the cornerstone of daily life.
Sam Isleta
Some households keep carved wooden bulul figures representing mythological deities to ensure good harvests and to protect the fields and granaries. These figures are venerated and passed down for generations.
Courtesy of the Division of Anthropology
The male and female bulul pictured here were collected by Harold C. Conklin, who worked at the Museum as a young man and later became an authority on the peoples of the Phillipines; he acquired these carvings while working among the Ifugao in the early 1960s.
Striking examples of the genre, they are about 12 inches high. They are part of a group of several hundred Ifugao objects obtained by Conklin and now part of the Museum’s collections.
These include wooden paddle spades for moving the soil to construct and repair pond fields where rice is cultivated as well as woven rattan trays for winnowing and baskets for storing the rice. Many other objects demonstrate the central role of this grain in daily Ifugao life.
Conklin, professor emeritus of anthropology at Yale University, has been involved in Philippine research since 1945. In the course of field research in many regions of the country, especially in Mindoro and northern Luzon, he published extensively on Philippine ethnography and linguistics. All told, almost 1,500 objects he collected were acquired by the Museum.
The Museum’s Philippine ethnology collection, the most comprehensive of its kind in the world, consists of more than 14,000 objects representing the varied cultures of the archipelago. The Museum’s Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples currently displays 145 items collected by Conklin, including 71 Ifugao objects.
Less than 3 percent of the Museum’s anthropological collection is on permanent exhibit. The rest is housed in climate-controlled storage facilities, which Museum Members can visit on occasional behind-the-scenes tours. The online collection database includes information and digital images of about 200,000 objects from Africa, Asia, Europe, the Pacific Islands, and the Americas.
© AMNH/D. Finnin