Horn

Description

Drinking horns and cups are among the many insignia that have denoted status in the highly hierarchical Kuba society since the kingdom’s foundation in the 17th century. This wooden sculpture—decorated with raised geometric and figural designs—imitates the horn of a buffalo, an animal that stands for the powerful, untamed wilderness and is therefore associated with both rulers and warriors.

Provenance

Raoul Blondiau, Brussels, Belgium, by 1925 [acquired between 1900 to 1925 according to Blondiau-Theatre Arts Collection, exh. cat., 1927]; sold to Theatre Arts, Inc. (Theatre Arts Monthly), New York, N.Y., Nov. 1926 [according to Blondiau-Theatre Arts Collection, exh. cat.1927; Deacon 1981]; sold to the Art Institute, 1928.

Horn

Kuba

Late 19th-early 20th century

Accession Number

88689

Medium

Wood, copper alloy, and iron

Dimensions

30.5 × 7.7 × 45.8 cm (12 × 3 × 18 in.)

Classification

drinking vessel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of George F. Harding