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Gold-weight

Akan

Artwork Details

Gold-weight
1900-1985
Akan
brass
2 3/8 in x 3/8 in x 1/4 in (6 cm x 0.9 cm x 0.7 cm)
Gift of Dr. James and Vivian Curtis
1997/1.447

Description

Subject Matter:

Gold-weight in the shape of a plant, possibly part of the oil palm. It may be a gold-weight directly cast from nature (cf. Phillips, African Goldweights, 2010, p. 47). Among the floral motifs found on the gold-weights used by Akan-speaking peoples in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, representations of the oil palm are particularly common. Proverbs associated with this motif include "all plants may shed their leaves except the palm tree", meaning lies will eventually be revealed but the truth remains, as well as "the strength of the palm tree is in its branches", meaning a king's power lies in the number of his people (cf. Garrard, Akan Weights and the Gold Trade, 1980, p. 208).

Physical Description:

Gold-weight in the shape of cresent forms stacked on top of one another with a small cylindrical post at one end. 

Usage Rights:

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