Malinke
Cigarette Container
Mandingo, 1900-1932
Scroll
Malinke
Cigarette Container
Mandingo, 1900-1932
Physical Qualities
Tin-plated iron, leather, plant fiber, 9 x 7 cm.
Credit Line
Gift of Catherine O'Carroll Bussell and Robert Bruce Bussell, Arlington, Virginia
Object Number
1998.439
Tobacco, a plant native to the Americas, was introduced to Africa by the Portuguese in the 16th century. By the 18th century, it was widely used across the continent. Mortars for grinding tobacco leaves into snuff, pipes for smoking, and containers for storage were prestige goods sought by privileged male and female leaders and elders, and others who were wealthy and connected enough to obtain tobacco through trade.
Imaginative smoking paraphernalia, such as the Lulua mortar in the form of
a crouching figure, gave the smoker visual and tactile pleasure while preparing and smoking tobacco. The Lulua pipe allowed the smoker to contemplate the reach of his power and influence while watching smoke rise from the pipe bowl carved
as the palm of a hand.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 1998; collected in Liberia, probably March 23, 1927, as the gift of a Mr. Belton, of Great Britain, by the parents of donor (Bruce Bussell): Conrad Turner Bussell and Pauline Bussell. Mr. Bussell was sent by the U.S. Government under President Calvin Coolidge to survey the boundaries of Liberia. He was, instead, made Supervisor of Customs by President Charles Dunbar Burgess King of Liberia, and later made Financial Advisor to President King. Mrs. Bussell arrived in 1926.
Hand Held: Personal Arts from Africa
