On view

African Art

Vessel,

late 19th–20th century

Artist unrecorded
Kuba
y1985-76
After graduating from Princeton University in 1957, Perry E. H. Smith lived in Italy, India, Algeria, Madagascar, and Democratic Republic of the Congo. Smith worked for international aid organizations that supported education, reforestation, and food and medicine distribution in new African nations grappling with colonial legacies of underinvestment in infrastructure. His work in Congo in the early 1970s relied on existing missionary networks, many of which had been complicit in the eradication of traditional religious practices and the removal of cultural heritage from communities. Through these missionaries, Smith gained access to collections of historical art assembled over decades. He began to collect art from the missions, as well as from public markets and traders. Smith later donated over one hundred works from Congo to this Museum, including masquerade headdresses, personal adornments made of ivory, and delicately carved everyday objects—some of which are on view in this gallery.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
Vessel
Dates

late 19th–20th century

Medium
Wood
Dimensions
h. 21.2 × diam. 10.2 cm (8 3/8 × 4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Perry E. H. Smith, Class of 1957
Object Number
y1985-76
Place Made

Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mushenge

Materials
Techniques

Purchased by Perry E.H. Smith (1936?-2019), Zaire (present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo) between 1971 and circa 1975; donated to the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, 1985.