Edo

Tusk

1850-1888
Ivory
195.6 × 12.7 cm (77 × 5 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026

View at artic.eduPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

Benin royal altars have been embellished with matched pairs of carved elephant tusks since the 18th century, when ivory—a commodity traditionally controlled by the Benin king—dramatically increased in value. In the mid-19th century King Adolo (reigned about 1850–88) commissioned this tusk and 15 others for the altar of his father, Osemwende. It was anchored on a brass head like the one displayed nearby, and prominently features fish-legged oba (king) imagery in honor of the 15th-century ruler Ewuare.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Edo

PlaquePlaqueHead (Uhunmwun Elao)Head (Uhunmwun Elao)Commemorative HeadCommemorative Head

More like this

Ballock DaggerNorth European, possibly Flemish — Ballock DaggerBallock DaggerGerman — Ballock DaggerBallock DaggerNorth European, possibly Flemish — Ballock DaggerSpoon Incised with Circles on Handle and Abstract Bird on TopInca — Spoon Incised with Circles on Handle and Abstract BirLadleChina — LadleAxeItalian — AxeScabbard SlideChina — Scabbard SlideBill (Roncone)Northern Italian, Milan — Bill (Roncone)Fish PendantChina — Fish PendantCinquedeaItalian — CinquedeaIncendiary Coil ("Crown of Fire")European, Austrian — Incendiary Coil ("Crown of Fire")Female FigureTellem — Female Figure