Description
Across the Gur-speaking region, individuals and families establish altars to honor and commune with influential spirits. Making altar vessels is the work of highly accomplished potters. The spikes on these vessels reflect a practice that is found across West Africa. Among the Lobi, such spikes symbolize fertility, fecundity, and protection. On this vessel, a chameleon, a symbol of wealth, stands squarely on the lid used to protect the powerful substances within from natural and supernatural contamination. [See also 2005.235].
Provenance
Gilbert Ouadrago, Burkina Faso, by 1998; sold to Douglas Dawson Gallery, Chicago, Ill., 1998; sold to the Art Institute, 1998.
Accession Number
151360
Medium
Terracotta
Dimensions
45 × 40 × 40 cm (17 3/4 × 15 3/4 × 15 3/4 in.)
Classification
earthenware
Credit Line
Arnold Crane Fund; Irving Dobkin Endowment; through prior acquisitions of Katharine Kuh