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Ceremonial basket adorned with cowrie shells

Creator Name

Unidentified

Cultural Context

African Americans

Date

2010s

About the Work

National Museum of African American History and Culture Object Description
This cowrie shell basket was created by artisans in Mossuril, Mozambique, in 2015 to hold soil from the region, which was then deposited at the site of the São José shipwreck. After a solemn ceremony on May 30, 2015, the village and tribal elder in Mossuril, Evano Nhogache, entrusted this basket to Lonnie Bunch, instructing him to place the enclosed soil as close to the wreck site as possible to symbolically reconnect those Mozambicans who were lost with their homeland. He then asked that the basket become part of the collections of the NMAAHC. On June 2, 2015, at a second memorial in Clifton, the soil was poured into the ocean near the wreck site. The slave ship São José ...

Work details

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Curationist Logo= Curationist added metadata

Title

Ceremonial basket adorned with cowrie shells

Creator

Unidentified, Created by

Worktype

baskets; Baskets (containers)

Cultural Context

African Americans

Material

fiber and cowrie shell

Dimensions

H x W x D: 5 5/8 × 6 1/2 × 6 1/2 in. (14.3 × 16.5 × 16.5 cm)

Technique

--

Language

--

Date

2010s;
Date: 2015

Provenance

Credit Line: Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Style Period

--

Rights

Curationist Logo
CC0
CC0

Inscription

--

Location

Mossuril; Nampula; Mozambique; Africa; Cape Town; Western Cape; South Africa

Subjects

African American; Africa; Craftsmanship; Design; Folklife; Middle Passage; Ornamentation; Trans Atlantic slave trade

Topic

--

Related Content

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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Unidentified, Ceremonial basket adorned with cowrie shells, 2010s, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution. CC0.

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