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Palm Wine Cup

Kuba

Artwork Details

Palm Wine Cup
1900-1983
Kuba
wood
7 x 3 x 3 3/4 in. (18.5 x 9.0 x 9.6 cm)
Gift of Al and Margaret Coudron
1983/2.163

Description

Palm Wine, made from raffia palm trees, is a popular beverage among Kuba men and women. Elaborately decorated cups, however, are generally reserved for the ceremonial drinking of palm wine. The motifs found on many of these cups come from an extensive Kuba decorative vocabulary, which is used on many Kuba art forms, including sculpture and textiles. Human representations may also be included. Decorated wooden palm wine cups were items of high prestige until the twentieth century when their use diminished due to the increased monetary value placed on the cups by Western collectors and the introduction of metal and plastic replacements.

Subject Matter:

Kuba artists applied their bold and sophisticated surface designs to both ceremonial and everyday objects alike. Objects such as drums, boxes, stools, backrests, knives, swords, bangles, wisdom baskets, staffs and fly whisks were typically reserved for the king and his courtiers. However, these objects in addition to cups, rubbing oracles, pipes, combs, drinking horns, ritual spoons, and scepters also served specific religious and ceremonial functions, or were simply everyday objects for common use.

Ornately designed cups were often created as a form of competition among title members. The cups were used to drink palm wine. Palm wine, made from raffia palm trees, was a popular beverage among Kuba men and women. Additionally, elaborately decorated cups were generally reserved for ceremonial purposes.

References:
Daniel Biebuyck, The Arts of Zaire, 1985
Georges Meurant, African Textiles from the Kingdom of Kuba, 1986
Roy Sieber, African Textiles and Decorative Arts, 1972
Jan Vansina, The Children of Woot, 1978

Physical Description:

Cup in the shape of a human head. The neck extends downward and serves as the cup's base. Carved lines wrap around the base of the cup. There is a carved circular shape at the temples of the human head. The rim of the cup extends upward on top of the figure's head. 

Usage Rights:

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