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Female Figure - Image 2
Female Figure - Image 3
Female Figure - Image 4
Public Domain

Sapi

Female Figure

Sapi, 1100-1548

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Sapi

Female Figure

Sapi, 1100-1548

Physical Qualities Stone, 22 x 9.7 x 7.7 cm.
Credit Line Gift of Phyllis K. and A. Harvey Schreter, Baltimore
Object Number 1999.486
With straight backs and level gazes, the men and women represented in these wood and stone sculptures are confident and self-assured. Between 1200 and 1700, Sapi men and women along West Africa's Guinea Coast commissioned artists to carve portraits of their loved ones. Artworks like these provide insight into life in this early modern period. Note the male figure on your right. The tankard in his hand comes from the Netherlands. People along thte Guinea Coast bought luxury goods from Portugese traders, who first arrived on the coast 1465. Its inclusion in this portrait sculpture tells us that the man depicted was wealthy, well-connected, and potentially worked as a merchant or trader.
African Reinstallation, "Sacred Art," Apr 2015, Wurtzburger Galleries, Kathryn Gunsch.
Frederick John Lamp, "See the Music Hear the Dance: Rethinking African Art at the Baltimore Museum of Art." New York: Prestel, 2003, p.195, ill.

Inscribed: Collector's sticker on bottom: 76/1 - 12/16/84 - Kissi - H56 - 7'

Culture

Sapi

2000–2000

Meet Sapi

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