On view

African Art

Caryatid headrest base,

before 1924

Artist unrecorded
Chokwe
y1953-147

From 1885 until 1960, King Leopold II and later Belgium controlled present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo and exploited its natural resources, including gold, diamonds, and copper. The mining industry in Congo is still notorious for its devastating environmental impact and its human rights abuses.

Colonialism in Congo, and elsewhere in Africa, relied on American investment. In 1919, Princeton University graduate Donald B. Doyle moved to the Kasai region of Belgian Congo to manage the Tshikapa Diamond Mines for Forminière, a mining company founded in 1906 with the funds of American industrialists. While stationed there, Joyce Doyle, Donald’s wife, amassed 150 objects, which she later donated to this Museum in memory of her husband. Her collection included this intricately carved square cosmetic box and base of a headrest consisting of two seated figures decorated with imported brass furniture tacks distinctive to Chokwe art. Joyce’s collecting depended upon the operations of the Tshikapa mines, and she urged prospectors traveling to the field to “bring me things that the Africans made and had used,” as she wrote in a statement sent to the Museum in 1976.

Information

Title
Caryatid headrest base
Dates

before 1924

Medium
Wood, paint, and upholstery studs
Dimensions
13 × 16.3 × 7.4 cm (5 1/8 × 6 7/16 × 2 15/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Donald B. Doyle in memory of her husband, Class of 1905
Object Number
y1953-147
Place Made

Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Culture

Acquired by Joyce K. Doyle in or near Tshikapa, Kasai region or Kinshasa, present-day Democratic Republic of Congo (former Belgian Congo), between 1919 and 1923; donated to the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, 1947.