Description
Decorated with beads and cowrie shells, the leather straps attached to this wooden vessel were used to carry it over the shoulder or hang it inside or outside the house. Among the Turkana, as among many other nomadic herders in eastern Africa, such containers were used to collect and transport milk from cattle, goats, sheep, camels, or donkeys. Although vessels of this general shape are also used by the neighboring Rendille, the red-and-black design indicates that this example has Turkana origins. Its fitted cap doubles as a drinking cup.
Provenance
Joseph Knopfelmacher (1923–2019), New York [this and the following according to documentation from Amyas Naegele Fine Art Bases, Oct. 2022; copy in curatorial object file]; by descent to his estate, 2019. Amyas Naegele Fine Art Bases, New York; sold to Michael R. Mack, Atlanta, 2022; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2024.
Accession Number
271827
Medium
Wood, animal hide, glass beads, cowrie shells, and pigment
Dimensions
overall: 53.4 × 20.4 × 20.4 cm (21 × 8 × 8 in.)
Classification
vessel
Credit Line
Gift of the Michael R. Mack Collection