IDNO

P.74012.GIJ


Description

Close up view of a man carver making a lidded bowl. He is seated and is holding a metal tool in one hand and an adze in the other. The bowl is hollowed out and rounded and the lid is also rounded.


Place

W Africa; Nigeria; South Eastern Nigeria; near Awka; Amobia village


Cultural Affliation

Igbo [historically Ibo]; Nri Awka


Named Person


Photographer

Jones, Gwilliam Iwan (known as G.I.)


Collector / Expedition


Date

circa 1930 - 1939


Collection Name

Jones collection


Source

Jones, Gwilliam Iwan (known as G.I.)


Format

Print Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

P.74011.GIJ to P.74015.GIJ came from the envelope now numbered C343/.

Publication: Same image published on John McCall’s G.I. Jones website with the following information: [Source: www.siu.edu/~anthro/mccall/jones/, AF ]
1. Index to Igbo music, shrines, architecture and other cultural artifacts
2. Other Igbo cultural items
3. Wood carver Amobia Village, Nri-Awka (18th image)

Context: Context: In relation to the style of carving in the Nri Awka area, Jones writes, “ The area that has produced most of the carvings in the Lower Niger style was the Nri/Awka Ibo area of the Onitsha province. Not only masks an figures, but decorative carvings of all sorts were produced here and in considerable quantity: for example, stools, doors, panels, lidded boxes, hand mirrors, bowls and other utensils, sometimes plain but more usually ornamented in an angular geometric style. The number and variety of masks and masquerades was considerable; they were referred to generically as Mau (Ghost) (Jones, 1984, p.142-143).

Bibliographical Reference: Jones, G.I., 1984. The Art of Eastern Nigeria (Cambridge University Press)

This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Alicia Fentiman 19/12/2007]


FM:208662

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