Vases Water Container
Water Container

Water Container

Nupe · Early/mid–20th century
<p>Nupe potters use a convex-mold technique to form the base of round-bottomed vessels. In this method they hammer a flat disk of clay over the top of the mold, usually a fired pot, until achieving the desired shape. They then finish the piece with coils if so desired.<br>On this pot, the rounding of the lower half slows to a gradual inward slope at midpoint and terminates in a rimless opening. The incised embellishment is relatively thick and deep and was applied with a comb. On the upper half of the vessel, two wide bands of pattern are separated by raised lines. The lower of these bands is filled in with zigzag lines, while the upper one has a series of arches that are further punctuated by raised dots of clay. A similarly embellished vessel is said to have come from the region of Muregi.</p>
Date
Early/mid–20th century
Culture
Nigeria
Painter
Museum
Art Institute of Chicago
Accession Number
2012.500
Image Source
chicago_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)