stamped gold weight in the form of a rectangular prism, unrecorded Asante artist

Artwork Overview

stamped gold weight in the form of a rectangular prism, late 1800s–early 1900s
Where object was made: Côte d'Ivoire
Material/technique: pigment; stamping; casting; brass
Dimensions:
Object Height/Width/Depth (Height x Width x Depth): 3.3 x 1.4 x 1.4 cm
Object Height/Width/Depth (Height x Width x Depth): 1 5/16 x 0 9/16 x 0 9/16 in
Credit line: Gift of Robert A. Hiller in honor of Chantal de Buchy
Accession number: 2018.0068
On display: Stewart Gallery

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Label texts

Beginning in the ninth century, Akan-speaking communities of West Africa established a dynamic trade hub that connected populations across the African continent and beyond. To facilitate the exchange of commodities like gold, ivory, salt, and pepper, Akan artisans created brass scoops, scales, and weights like these to measure gold dust. Gold dust was the standardized unit of currency created from the abundant mineral deposits found along what European colonizers would later term the “Gold Coast.”

Exhibitions

Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
2022–2027
Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
2022–2027

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