Description
Among the Zulu, pottery is a specialized art form that is practiced by skilled women who make wares for family use and for sale. While many of the same forms of pottery—including the round-bodied and lipless beer-serving vessel—can be found across Zululand, there are distinctive regional styles of decoration. Potters in the Hlabisa region use a comb to inscribe thin, closely spaced lines into the wet clay. On this pot these form a textured panel of delicate ridges around the body that is intersected by a smooth zigzag band at the shoulders.
Provenance
Art Gallery Grusenmeyer, Brussels, Belgium, by 1992; sold to Douglas Dawson Gallery, Chicago, Ill., 1992; sold to Keith Achepohl, Iowa City, Iowa, probably 1995; given to the Art Institute, 2006.
Accession Number
185693
Medium
Blackened terracotta
Dimensions
24.1 × 29.2 × 19 cm (9 1/2 × 11 1/2 × 7 1/2 in.)
Classification
vessel
Credit Line
Gift of Keith Achepohl