2017.20.5 Kente cloth (green with peppers)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Kente is the best known and most popular of the Asante textiles. Oral traditions credit a spider’s web-making with having inspired two hunters to create the first kente. Osei Tutu I, the first king of the Asante, reserved the cloth for royals. Over time, with greater varieties of colors and materials, kente became accessible to more of the population.

Silk kente with named designs continue to be limited to Asante elites. The name of this design, mokowa, translates to “little pepper” and refers to the multicolor sections of weaving interspersed within the cloth’s green background. Although this is not an elite kente pattern, it would have been a prestigious garment because it is made entirely of silk. 

Adapted from
  • Roslyn Walker, The Power of Gold: Asante Royal Regalia from Ghana, Label text, 2018.  

NOTES

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Asante: AAT: 300016004

Geography 
Ghana (nation): TGN: 1000166

Process/materials
silk (textile): AAT: 300243428
weaving: AAT: 300053642
supplementary warp (warp patterning): AAT: 300228475

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms
clothing: AAT: 300266639
prestige: AAT: 300343604
nobility (nobles / aristocracy): AAT: 300025942

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
1960-2009: Donald Simmons, United Kingdom

2009-2016: Kapil Jariwala, London

2016-2017: Andrés Moraga, Berkeley

From 2017: Dallas Museum of Art, African Collection Fund purchase from above 

The main source for this provenance is information already entered in TMS. 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 2017.20.5

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General Description
 
Kente is the best known and most popular of the Asante textiles. Oral traditions credit a spider’s web-making with having inspired two hunters to create the first kente. Osei Tutu I, the first king of the Asante, reserved the cloth for royals. Over time, with greater varieties of colors and materials, kente became accessible to more of the population.

Silk kente with named designs continue to be limited to Asante elites. The name of this design, mokowa, translates to “little pepper” and refers to the multicolor sections of weaving interspersed within the cloth’s green background. Although this is not an elite kente pattern, it would have been a prestigious garment because it is made entirely of silk. 

Adapted from
  • Roslyn Walker, The Power of Gold: Asante Royal Regalia from Ghana, Label text, 2018.  

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Asante: AAT: 300016004

Geography 
Ghana (nation): TGN: 1000166

Process/materials
silk (textile): AAT: 300243428
weaving: AAT: 300053642
supplementary warp (warp patterning): AAT: 300228475

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms
clothing: AAT: 300266639
prestige: AAT: 300343604
nobility (nobles / aristocracy): AAT: 300025942

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
1960-2009: Donald Simmons, United Kingdom

2009-2016: Kapil Jariwala, London

2016-2017: Andrés Moraga, Berkeley

From 2017: Dallas Museum of Art, African Collection Fund purchase from above 

The main source for this provenance is information already entered in TMS. 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2017.20.5
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
%Archived
nobility (nobles / aristocracy): AAT: 300025942
@Courtney
#routed
*Arts of Africa
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
prestige: AAT: 300343604
Asante: AAT: 300016004
weaving: AAT: 300053642
silk (textile): AAT: 300243428
Ghana (nation): TGN: 1000166
kente: AAT: 300014085
Bonwire (inhabited place): TGN: 7668940
clothing: AAT: 300266639
supplementary warp (warp patterning): AAT: 300228475
source file
object_notes_2_d-0258.xml.nores