Currently not on view

Ceremonial seat (ngundja),

early 20th century, before 1975

Chokwe artist
y1980-23
This Chokwe chair, a portable symbol of chiefly authority, adopts the design and construction techniques of European furniture, which Portuguese traders introduced to Central Africa in the sixteenth century. Chokwe artists carved their earliest four-legged chairs from single pieces of wood; as a result, these tended to be relatively compact and small in scale. This chair was constructed of separate pieces of wood joined together in the European fashion, its individual rungs and top rail embellished with carvings prior to assembly. The seat would have been covered with leather or hide, now missing from this example. The figures and vignettes artfully spanning the chair’s rungs catalogue the daily and ritual life of the Chokwe court: masqueraders wearing the winged Chihongo headdress, a drummer, and a younger male royal, recognizable by his rounded top hat.

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Information

Title
Ceremonial seat (ngundja)
Dates

early 20th century, before 1975

Maker
Chokwe artist
Medium
Wood, paint, and metal
Dimensions
h. 60.0 cm (23 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Perry E. H. Smith, Class of 1957
Object Number
y1980-23
Place Made

Africa, Angola, Tshikapa region

Culture
Materials

Bertha Miller, Belgian Congo or Republic of the Congo-Léopoldville (present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo) after 1930; Perry E.H. Smith, Zaire (present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo) between 1971 and circa 1975; Princeton University Art Museum, 1980