Vintage Natural Elbow Traditional by Joe Timbery

Item K24  

This Item was Sold on 18 January 2014 for $251


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Historical Pricing information for this item and similar artifacts can be found at: Historical Artifact Prices.


This Australian Aboriginal traditional boomerang was made by Joe Timbery out of a large natural elbow. The elbow is a very dense hardwood and the grain runs along the curvature of the boomerang. There is a beautiful fiddleback pattern to the grain along most of the length. The airfoiling is excellent. The surfaces are smooth and polished with a fine patina. The upper surface is signed as "Made by Joe Timbery La Perouse Australia" with a hot poker. Although it is not dated, the collection that it came from had other boomerangs dated in the 1930s and 1940s. I would expect this boomerang to be from the same period. This is one of the nicest early Aboriginal boomerangs I have a seen and one of the earliest made by Joe Timbery. There is a shallow chip taken out of the leading edge of the dingle arm, but there are no cracks and the boomerang has full strength.

Span = 64 cm ; Weight = 215 gm


Joe Timbery (1912 - 1978) is one of the most famous members of the famous Timbery family with roots in La Perouse, located north of Sydney on Australia's south east coast. Joe's grandmother, Emma, (1842-1916) was known as Queen Timbery and she is famous for making shell necklaces. Joe made a large number of boomerangs, shields and other collectibles for the tourist industry. Some were made like pre-contact artifacts and some were painted or engraved with motifs such as Australian flora and fauna or iconic images like the Harbor Bridge. Joe was also well known for his throwing abilities. He gave boomerang lessons, wrote poetry and told stories. Joe traveled to other countries and is famous for throwing demonstrations in France and for Queen Elizabeth in the 1950s. In the 1960s, Joe started to make boomerangs for Duncan MacLennan, founder of the Sydney Boomerang School. Joe continued to make boomerangs for Duncan until Joe's death.
Australian Aborigines are well known for making boomerangs. The majority of the Aborigines had the technology to make throwsticks, or non-returning boomerangs. Only a small percentage of the tribal groups knew how to make true returners and most of these came from the eastern coastal regions of Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. During the past century, the majority of the Aborigines came out of the bush and were assimilated into the European culture. Many Aborigines began making returning style boomerangs to sell to tourists. The earliest ones were well made out of natural timber and with the grain following the curvature of the boomerang. Today, most hardwood boomerang are cut out of a large board and the grain is usually straight and running parallel to a line spanning the tips of the blades. Boomerangs that are made with the grain following the contour of the blades are much stronger and more valuable. In addition, only a small percentage of the boomerangs have good airfoiling. The majority do not. Most "tourist boomerangs" have painted upper surfaces that display Australian animals and decorative lines and/or geometric patterns. Most pre-contact returners have no artwork or the artwork is simple and etched into the surface. It is easy to tell the tourist boomerangs from the valuable ethnographic artifacts. However, tourist boomerangs that are made properly with the grain running along the contour and with good airfoiling and art fly well and they do have good collectable value, especially if they are made by famous Aboriginal artists with last names like Onus , Timbery or Roberts



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