2013.17.2 Ceremonial vessel


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The upper portion of this roughly globular vessel with a long ringed neck is elaborately decorated with textured and plain interlocking triangles separated by raised lines and circles. The rounded bottom of the vessel rested on a fiber ring. The source of inspiration for this vessel's ornamentation may be the ancient ceramics and bronze castings from Igbo Ukwu, an important archaeological site where the oldest examples of Igbo pottery has been found. If so, the ornamentation here has not been slavishly copied but modified and embellished through successive generations of innovative female potters.

Before the introduction of imported ceramic and metal wares, Igbo women and girls made various kinds of pottery to serve a host of utilitarian and ritual purposes. Girls learned from their mothers to form pots% without a potter's wheel and fire them in an open pit or on the ground. They used hand-building and coiling techniques for basic shapes and decorated the surface with sculptural, incised, combed, or rouletted ornamentation. The vessels could be burnished with smooth stones, and in areas near Hausa settlements, painted after firing. 

This elegant and elaborately decorated vessel was not for use in a domestic context but in the shrines where the gods and ancestors were served with the best vessels and other ritual paraphernalia.

Adapted from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, Arts of Africa, 2015.
  • Roslyn A. Walker, DMA unpublished material, 2013.

NOTES

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RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
2006: Douglas Dawson Gallery, purchased from Kao Ibrahim

2013: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above

The main source for this provenance is the Acquisition Proposal in the Collections Records object file (2013.17.2)

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General Description
 
The upper portion of this roughly globular vessel with a long ringed neck is elaborately decorated with textured and plain interlocking triangles separated by raised lines and circles. The rounded bottom of the vessel rested on a fiber ring. The source of inspiration for this vessel's ornamentation may be the ancient ceramics and bronze castings from Igbo Ukwu, an important archaeological site where the oldest examples of Igbo pottery has been found. If so, the ornamentation here has not been slavishly copied but modified and embellished through successive generations of innovative female potters.

Before the introduction of imported ceramic and metal wares, Igbo women and girls made various kinds of pottery to serve a host of utilitarian and ritual purposes. Girls learned from their mothers to form pots% without a potter's wheel and fire them in an open pit or on the ground. They used hand-building and coiling techniques for basic shapes and decorated the surface with sculptural, incised, combed, or rouletted ornamentation. The vessels could be burnished with smooth stones, and in areas near Hausa settlements, painted after firing. 

This elegant and elaborately decorated vessel was not for use in a domestic context but in the shrines where the gods and ancestors were served with the best vessels and other ritual paraphernalia.

Adapted from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, Arts of Africa, 2015.
  • Roslyn A. Walker, DMA unpublished material, 2013.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
2006: Douglas Dawson Gallery, purchased from Kao Ibrahim

2013: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above

The main source for this provenance is the Acquisition Proposal in the Collections Records object file (2013.17.2)

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

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Objects
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2013.17.2
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
ceramic (material): AAT: 300235507
clay: AAT: 300010439
%Archived
deities: AAT: 300343850
vessels (containers): AAT: 300193015
ritual vessels: AAT: 300265801
geometric patterns: AAT: 300165213
ritual (events): AAT: 300065284
@Bilal-Gore
*Arts of Africa
Nigeria (nation): TGN: 1000182
circles (plane figures): AAT: 300055627
triangles (polygons): AAT: 300009806
geometric shape: AAT: 300263819
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
ancestors: AAT: 300255718
shrines (religious / ceremonial structures): AAT: 300007558
ceramics (object genre): AAT: 300151343
pottery (visual works): AAT: 300010666
Igbo: AAT: 300016065
source file
object_notes_2_c-0194.xml.nores