Vessel (Ukhamba)

Description

Within Zulu communities, serving sorghum beer to family and guests creates a sense of hospitality, maintains social cohesion, and functions as the primary means for communicating with ancestors. Ornamented vessels like the one displayed here, with textured patterns and blackened surfaces, enhance the experience both socially and spiritually. Women make them by using a coiling technique without a wheel. The decoration both enlivens the container visually and makes it easier to grip the surface.

Provenance

Unknown owner, South Africa; sold to Alain Guisson, Belgium, by the early 1990s [see note in curatorial file]; sold to Kevin Conru, London by 1996; sold to Douglas Dawson Gallery, Chicago, Ill., 1996; sold to the Art Institute, 1996.

Vessel (Ukhamba)

Northern Nguni

1970/90

Accession Number

145679

Medium

Blackened terracotta

Dimensions

30.5 × 25.4 × 25.4 cm (12 × 10 × 10 in.)

Classification

vessel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

O. Renard Goltra Fund