Pipe

Description

Mothers often used long-stemmed pipes like this because they helped direct smoke away from the babies they carried on their backs. Carved by men, pipes were used by both men and women. A female maker added beaded fringe using a color scheme typical of Xhosa beadwork. The miniature apron suspended from the fringe suggests a woman’s garment, and thus ownership of this pipe. Social and leisure practices, smoking and snuffing tobacco were also associated with the ancestors and with ideas of fertility and procreation. Inherited between individuals and families, pipes have connected clans and generations and thus linked the worldly present with the ancestral past.

Provenance

Finch & Co., London (2004); (Jacaranda Tribal, New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (2010); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2010–)

Pipe

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1800s–1900s

Accession Number

2010.199

Medium

Wood, copper, glass beads, sinew, leather, and thread

Dimensions

Overall: 20.3 cm (8 in.)

Classification

Implements

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund