Ndop Display Cloth

Description

The precise, tightly grouped patterns on this textile were created by binding narrow pleats of fabric and then immersing the entire cloth in indigo. The binding process for a work of this size and complexity would take months to complete. This textile was purchased in Foumban, Cameroon, by Clara Gebauer, a graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, who lived in Cameroon as part of the German Baptist Mission. In the 1930s, the royal capital of Foumban was the center of an evolving art market directed at expatriates. The signature in one corner of this textile suggests that a skilled craftsperson made it within that context.

Provenance

Paul Gebauer (died 1977) and Clara Gebauer (died 2004; born Clara Kratt), Portland, OR, 1936 [according to family papers, Clara Gebauer purchased the work in a market in Fumban, Cameroon]; consigned to Dave DeRoche Gallery, San Francisco, 1993; sold to Andres Moraga, Berkley, CA, 2000; sold to unnamed collector, 2003; sold to Andres Moraga, Berkeley, CA, 2009; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2010.

Ndop Display Cloth

Bamum

1910-1937

Accession Number

202877

Medium

60 panels joined: cotton, plain weave; resist-dyed indigo

Dimensions

171.1 × 327 cm (67 3/8 × 128 3/4 in.)

Classification

weaving - printed

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Department of African and Amerindian Curator's Discretionary and Louise A. Lutz Estate funds