Ceremonial Cup
Artist/Maker
Kuba peoples
, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Date20th century
MediumWood
DimensionsOverall: 9 × 5 3/4 × 6 1/2 in. (22.9 × 14.6 × 16.5 cm)
Credit LineGift in honor of Alexandra Gould (OC 2011)
Object number2011.26.28
Status
Not on viewThe Kuba traditionally drink palm wine out of simple cups known as ‘makoph’ as a means of camaraderie and socialization between men. The usual Kuba cup is a simple beaker, often decorated with typical linear motifs. Such cups are passed down for generations, some attaining a magnificent patina, and a great sense of importance as an heirloom object.
The Kuba are a strictly hierarchical society though, with each group divided into dozens of ranks and titles that correspond to privileges and responsibilities in society. Within this context, the cup of a nobleman has to be more decorated and elaborate than that of a commoner. Additionally, if an individual reaches a high rank in Kuba society, he may have a complex cup carved to indicate immediately to his contemporaries that he is an important individual.
This piece a nobleman's cup. It is made as a figural cup with complex carving that indicates the status and wealth of the individual who owned it. The motif is a visual pun; the male figure that is the body of the cup, reaches behind to hold a standing female figure who becomes the handle, and thereby the means to hold the cup.
Interestingly, the vast majority of the cups used by the Kuba traditionally, such as this example, were actually carved by Western neighbors of the Kuba: The Lele and Wongo peoples.
Over time, as most of the old specimens of these cups were collected and sold by the original owners, the newer examples that appeared were carved by the Kuba-Bushoong themselves and are clunky and of poor workmanship.
ProvenanceMohammed Kaba; acquired by Peter G. Gould and Robin M. Potter, Haddonfield, NJ; by gift 2011 to Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OHThe Kuba are a strictly hierarchical society though, with each group divided into dozens of ranks and titles that correspond to privileges and responsibilities in society. Within this context, the cup of a nobleman has to be more decorated and elaborate than that of a commoner. Additionally, if an individual reaches a high rank in Kuba society, he may have a complex cup carved to indicate immediately to his contemporaries that he is an important individual.
This piece a nobleman's cup. It is made as a figural cup with complex carving that indicates the status and wealth of the individual who owned it. The motif is a visual pun; the male figure that is the body of the cup, reaches behind to hold a standing female figure who becomes the handle, and thereby the means to hold the cup.
Interestingly, the vast majority of the cups used by the Kuba traditionally, such as this example, were actually carved by Western neighbors of the Kuba: The Lele and Wongo peoples.
Over time, as most of the old specimens of these cups were collected and sold by the original owners, the newer examples that appeared were carved by the Kuba-Bushoong themselves and are clunky and of poor workmanship.
Collections
- African & Oceanic
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20th century
18th–19th century
n.d.
20th century
19th century
20th century
20th century
20th century
20th century
late 19th–early 20th century