Snuff Spoon (intshengula or izintshengula)

Description

Often, snuff spoons made from the rib of an ox or cow were subtly carved to suggest a female body. Decorated with incised designs blackened with cattle fat and ash, many are true hybrid objects, combining a spoon with a long-tined comb or hairpin. Such spoons were typically worn as ornaments in the hair or even the beard, thus signaling the social standing of their wearer.

Provenance

Gertrude Hance [1844-1922], Brookdale, PA (after 1870–1922); Robert Pagano (Hance family member), sold to Jacaranda LLC, New York, NY (after 1922–2007); Dori and Daniel Rootenberg, Jacaranda Tribal, New York, NY, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (2007–2010); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2010–)

Snuff Spoon (intshengula or izintshengula)

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late 1800s

Accession Number

2010.234

Medium

bone

Dimensions

Overall: 17.8 cm (7 in.)

Classification

Implements

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Dori and Daniel Rootenberg, Jacaranda Tribal, New York