Snake Pendant

Ebrié; or Baule

1 of 5

Object Label

In Ghana and the Ivory Coast, regions that acquired great wealth from the mining and trading of gold, rulers displayed their status by wearing a profusion of gold ornaments, even attaching such objects to umbrellas and swords. Although many of these ornaments are abstract geometric shapes, some represent human faces or animals, as in the piece shown here depicting a coiled snake catching a frog. Such works were made using the lost-wax casting method, in which a clay mold was made around a modeled wax form. The mold was then heated and the wax poured out, after which molten gold was poured in and solidified in the form of the original wax model.

Caption

Ebrié; or Baule. Snake Pendant, 19th century. Gold, diameter: 3 9/16 in. (9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Frank L. Babbott Fund, 54.161. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)

Gallery

Not on view

Collection

Arts of Africa

Cultures

Ebrié, or Baule

Title

Snake Pendant

Date

19th century

Geography

Place made: Lagunes Region, Côte d'Ivoire

Medium

Gold

Classification

Accessories

Dimensions

diameter: 3 9/16 in. (9 cm)

Credit Line

Frank L. Babbott Fund

Accession Number

54.161

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