Description
The Maasai use locally grown calabashes, or gourds, in a variety of shapes and sizes as cups, bowls, or vessels. Pyro engravings (burnt on with an iron tool) and other incised designs are specific to a family or individual. These decorations are combined with hide straps, beads, and buttons to signal wealth and status; they also make it easier to locate one’s personal container when many are stacked together during communal events. This vessel features abstracted elephants and hoofprint designs.
Provenance
Acquired in Kenya by Joseph Knopfelmacher (1923–2019), New York, c. 1970 [documentation from Amyas Naegele Fine Art Bases; copy in curatorial object file]. Amyas Naegele Fine Art Bases, New York; sold to Michael R. Mack, Atlanta, 2023; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2024.
Accession Number
271804
Medium
Calabash, animal hide, and glass and plastic beads
Dimensions
96.6 × 11.5 × 16.6 cm (38 × 4 1/2 × 6 1/2 in.)
Classification
vessel
Credit Line
Gift of the Michael R. Mack Collection