Snuff Container

Description

Snuff containers made from small gourds are highly personal items among the Samburu and other nomadic herder groups. Typically carried on the body and used to store tobacco snuff, they were decorated with glass beads or iron chains. A costly luxury product, tobacco is consumed by both men and women for social and medicinal purposes, or sniffed as a means of communicating with ancestors and other spirits during divination.

Provenance

Acquired in Kenya by Murray Ochs, Bronx, NY, c. 1940s [this and the following according to certificate of authenticity; copy in curatorial object file]; Rhoda Ochs, Great Neck, NY; James Stephenson African Art, New York; given to Michael R. Mack, 2000; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2024.

Snuff Container

Maasai

Accession Number

271838

Medium

Ivory

Dimensions

with chain extended: 43.9 × 5.1 × 3.9 cm (17 1/4 × 2 × 1 1/2 in.); container only: 8 × 5.1 × 3.9 cm (3 1/8 × 2 × 1 1/2 in.)

Classification

snuff bottle

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of the Michael R. Mack Collection