Eleven Beads

Baule or Lagoon peoples

Not on view

This necklace is made of eleven gold beads: five rectangular, three bi-conical, two cylindrical, and one circular. Each one is decorated with intricate patterns created with a method known as lost-wax casting, which employs a wax model and mold to achieve the final gold object. These beads demonstrate the skills of Baule and Lagoon goldsmiths, as well as the endless malleability of gold. They present a rich variety of patterns: one rectangular bead is decorated with parallel rows of discs in a sort of filigree, while the other four rectangular beads show parallel braided patterns and are of various sizes. The three bi-conical and two cylindrical beads’ surfaces are adorned with fine raised dots punctuated by openwork patterns. The central circular bead, which likely represents a sun disk, combines concentric threads of gold and small triangular projections. These are popular motifs in Baule goldwork.

Gold beads such as these might be part of a matrilineal family’s sacred inheritance, which is a set of precious objects are kept as a shrine to the family’s ancestors. They are also used in gold display ceremonies to demonstrate the head of the family’s wealth. Each type of bead is named after a common or proverbial object, such as "bamboo door" or "setting sun," and there is a saying attached to each name. Circular beads, like the central ornament on this necklace, have special significance in Baule culture and are sometimes given to a bride’s family as a symbol of the groom’s intent to marry.

Art of Oceania, Africa, and the Americas from the Museum of Primitive Art, Exhibition Catalogue. Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1969.

Garrard, Timothy F. Gold of Africa: Jewellery and Ornaments from Ghana, Côte D'Ivoire, Mali and Senegal. Geneva: Barbier-Mueller Museum. 1989.

Newton, Douglas, André Malraux, and Nelson A. Rockefeller. Masterpieces of primitive art: the Nelson A. Rockefeller collection. Knopf, 1978.

Ross, Doran H, and Frances Marzio. Gold of the Akan from the Glassell Collection. Houston Museum of Fine Arts, 2002.

Vogel, Susan M. "Baule: African Art Western Eyes." African arts 30, no. 4 (1997): 64-95.

Eleven Beads, Gold copper alloy, Baule or Lagoon peoples

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