Figure (kgöngwana-tshingwana/Ngwana sehô)

Description

Fertility figures like these were used during the initiation ceremonies of pubescent girls. Integrating talismanic materials in their fabrication, the figures were meant to guarantee fertility and prevent or cure barrenness—a gourd’s womblike shape and the seeds within symbolize fecundity. They are sometimes also called “child figures” because a young bride would care for them as she would for her future children, carrying them on her back and sleeping with them until her first child was born.

Provenance

Jonathan Lowen, London; Bowmint Collection [Nicolas Maritz], Pretoria, South Africa (2009); (Jacaranda Tribal Art Gallery, New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (2010); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2010–)

Figure (kgöngwana-tshingwana/Ngwana sehô)

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1800s–1900s

Accession Number

2010.208

Medium

Wood, glass beads, cloth, thread, and copper alloy

Dimensions

Overall: 25.4 cm (10 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund