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Vessel

African Art Museum

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Object Details

Maker

Asante artist

Label Text

Among the Asante, hand-formed vessels called abusua kuruwa, meaning "family pot" or "clan pot," are kept in shrines and special rooms, where the royal ancestral stools are preserved, as well as in community cemeteries. The vessels contained the nail and hair clippings of close relatives of the deceased, water or other offerings.
A prestigious version of an abusua kuruwa is an abebudie, or proverb pot, which is elaborately decorated with representational motifs. An example of the type shown here has a long neck and multilobed stopper. Motifs modeled on the vessel visualize proverbs relating to death. The snake encircling the neck, for example, refers to the saying "the rainbow of death [a python] encircles everyman's neck," that is, death is inevitable. A similar proverb is conveyed by the ladder: "the ladder of death, no single person climbs it." Other motifs include an oware gameboard and an axe the deceased can use on the forty day journey to the afterlife. A cacao pod and an imported pocket watch may indicate the deceased was a successful farmer.

Description

Unglazed low fire ceramic vessel in a bottle-like form with a multi-lobed stopper. The horizontal surface of the body of the vessel is embellished with incised geometric motifs, and figurative relief designs: a snake coiled around the base of the neck faces a frog, a ladder, a gameboard, an axe, a mudfish, a cacao pod and a pocketwatch. There is a high relief, dotted object, that is chipped and may represent a scorpion or a bird or perhaps some other animal. Both the neck and the lower part of the vessel are covered with diagonal incised patterns.

Provenance

Emil J. Arnold, New York, -- to 1969

Exhibition History

From the Earth: African Ceramic Art, National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., May 17-October 9, 1983
Life...Afterlife: African Funerary Sculpture, National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., November 19, 1981-March 1, 1982

Published References

Blier, Suzanne Preston. 1998. The Royal Arts of Africa: The Majesty of Form. London: Lawrence King, p. 156, no. 129.
Cole, Herbert and Doran Ross. 1978. The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, no. 256.
Goodman, Elaine Sooy. 2009. "Warren M. Robbins and the Founding of the National Museum of African Art." Tribal Art XIII:2 (51), p. 94, no. 17.
National Museum of African Art. 1999. Selected Works from the Collection of the National Museum of African Art. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, p. 51, no. 30.
Robbins, Warren M. and Nancy Iingram Nooter. 1989. African Art in American Collections. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, p. 563, no. 1548.
Stössel, Arnulf. Afrikanische Keramik. Munich: Hirmer Verlag, p. 107.

Content Statement

As part of our commitment to accessibility and transparency, the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art is placing its collection records online. Please note that some records are incomplete (missing image or content descriptions) and others reflect out-of-date language or systems of thought regarding how to engage with and discuss cultural heritage and the specifics of individual artworks. If you see content requiring immediate action, we will do our best to address it in a timely manner. Please email nmafacuratorial@si.edu if you have any questions.

Image Requests

High resolution digital images are not available for some objects. For publication quality photography and permissions, please contact the Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives at https://africa.si.edu/research/eliot-elisofon-photographic-archives/

Credit Line

Gift of Emil Arnold

Date

Early-mid 20th century

Object number

69-35-36

Restrictions & Rights

Usage conditions apply

Type

Ceramics

Medium

Ceramic

Dimensions

H x W x D: 25.4 x 21 x 21 cm (10 x 8 1/4 x 8 1/4 in.)

Geography

Ghana

See more items in

National Museum of African Art Collection

Data Source

National Museum of African Art

Topic

Funerary
Commemorative
Ancestral
Shrine/Altar
snake
gameboard
frog
mudfish
ladder
male
clock

Metadata Usage

Usage conditions apply

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ys7ef446290-1b4b-47cd-b0bf-b273f3d1247e

Record ID

nmafa_69-35-36

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