Kuba

Pendant

19th century
Jute, raffia, cowrie shells, and beads
14 × 2.5 cm (5.5 × 1 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

Since the inception of the Kuba Kingdom in the 16th century, individuals have signaled court rank and status with their elaborate dress. Glass beads imported from Europe and cowrie shells from the Indian Ocean have been used in the production of such accoutrements since the 18th century. Exclusively owned by men, bead- and shell-covered belts and pendants like this pre-1910 examples are still worn in combination with voluminous textile skirt-wrappers by both Kuba royalty and Kuba masqueraders. [See also 1997.461]

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Kuba

Pendant Belt (Nkody Mupaap)Pendant Belt (Nkody Mupaap)HornHornBelt (Yeemy Mambolmashet)Belt (Yeemy Mambolmashet)Woman's OverskirtWoman's OverskirtWoman's SkirtWoman's SkirtWoman's OverskirtWoman's OverskirtCeremonial SkirtCeremonial SkirtWoman's OverskirtWoman's Overskirt

More like this

Man's Shoulder BagWinnebago — Man's Shoulder BagWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindleLoincloth PanelChancay — Loincloth PanelCeremonial Waist Sash (ikak pinggang)Minangkabau — Ceremonial Waist Sash (ikak pinggang)Wooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindleWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindleBalance-Beam Scale with Geometric Cut-out Motifs and String holding Shell PendantsNasca — Balance-Beam Scale with Geometric Cut-out Motifs andWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindleWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindleWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden SpindlePipe BagLakota — Pipe BagWooden SpindlePeru, Possibly central coast — Wooden Spindle