
Storage Container (Etso)
<p>Among the Nupe the skills for making useful, beautiful domestic pottery are passed down from mother to daughter. Specialized family ateliers were once active throughout Nupe country, particularly in the area of Bida, the region’s capital. While large pots are fired in the open, more dimunitive ones are placed in a small, roofless, earthen kiln, a technique rarely found in Africa. According to scholars, columnar containers such as this one are typical of ceramics produced in Bida’s Masagá, or glass worker’s quarter. These vessels are likely made with the direct pull method, which Nupe potters use along with the convex mold technique. Such objects appear in two distinct styles. One features a series of broad, flat rings that encircle the trunk from just below the neck to just above the bowl-like base. The other, more delicate style, seen here, features an ornate array of raised and incised marks, and often includes a pair of close-set cones at midpoint, suggestive of breasts. Columnar containers are used in Nupe homes to store clothing and dry goods. In one abandoned village, such vessels were documented half-buried in the earthen floor, possibly to help in preserving foodstuffs. The pieces are designed so that a round-bottomed pot can be stacked on top of their wide, substantial rims. This helps keep the contents clean and is also an efficient use of space in the tight quarters of a traditional Nupe house. It is for this reason that such containers are sometimes referred to as “pot stands.” Formally, this stacking also mirrors the stacked appearance of the carved wooden posts used to support the structure of Nupe homes.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1900
- Medium
- Terracotta
- Dimensions
- 61 × 31.2 × 31.2 cm (24 × 12 1/4 × 12 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
More
More by this artist
Panel
1901 · Cotton and rayon, warp-faced, warp-striped plain weave with supplementary patterning and brocading wefts; main warp fringe; two widths joined
Panel
1901 · Cotton and rayon, warp-stripe, weft-band plain weave with paired warps and supplementary patterning and brocading wefts; warp fringe; two widths joined
Water or Palm Wine Container
1900 · Terracotta
Vessel
1900 · Ceramic and pigment
Wrapper
1900 · Cotton and probably silk; stripes of warp-faced plain weave; supplementary brocading wefts with crossing and wavering weft turns; embroidered; two panels joined with machine stitching; four salvages present; group and twisted extending warp fringe
Water Container
1900 · Terracotta
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Year
- 1900
- Medium
- Terracotta
- Dimensions
- 61 × 31.2 × 31.2 cm (24 × 12 1/4 × 12 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1900-137018
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified
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