One of a Pair of Shrine Figures

Description

Open at the bottom and hollow within, this impressive figure [and its companion, 2005.238.1] is an essentially upside-down pot and was doubtlessly made by a potter. Figures such as this one have been described as protective and as representations of ancestors, and they may signify one of the many Vodun that come into being when an important person dies. Figures with the same tufted coiffure, but with squatter bodies, have been collected in southern Ghana and are said to have been brought there in the 1930s. Others come from the border between Togo and Republic of Benin. A male and female pair collected in Togo displays similar elongated bodies, flat, truncated arms and hands, and heavy-lidded expressions. [See also 2005.238.1].

Provenance

Kalifa Diabate, United States, by 1996; sold to Douglas Dawson Gallery, Chicago, Ill., 1996; sold to Keith Achepohl, Iowa City, Iowa, by 2005; given to the Art Institute, 2005.

One of a Pair of Shrine Figures

Ewe

Late 19th/early 20th century

Accession Number

185671

Medium

Terracotta

Dimensions

59 × 21.5 × 24 cm (23 1/4 × 8 1/2 × 9 1/2 in.)

Classification

sculpture

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Keith Achepohl