Water Container

Description

Well-made pots like this thin-walled water container are appreciated for the beauty they bring to a living space. Baule potters learn to produce such dark-colored, wide-bodied pots for a variety of household uses by proceeding from observation and imitation to formal education. To embellish the vessel displayed here, a potter etched lines into its body and highlighted them with kaolin (a clay mineral).

Provenance

Unknown owner, Tanoh Sakassou [village near Bouaké], Côte d'Ivoire, about 1990; sold to Jérome Vogel, New York, N.Y., about 1990; sold to Tom Alexander, St. Louis, Mo., about 1990; sold to Keith Achepoh, about 1990; given to the Art Institute, 2004.

Water Container

Baule

Early/mid–20th century

Accession Number

184630

Medium

Blackened terracotta, wash, and kaolin

Dimensions

33.7 × 39.4 cm (13 1/4 × 15 1/2 in.)

Classification

ceramics

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Keith Achepohl