Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of copper alloy.

Goldweight with a Geometric Design

18th/19th century

Asante or related Akan-speaking peoples Ghana Coastal West Africa

Ghana

This small, square gold weight consists of a pattern of four concentric semicircles on its face. It is probable that this weight was made sometime in the 18th or 19th centuries in light of its ornate “wax-thread” design, which was common during that period. Brass and copper weights were used for five centuries—between about 1400 and 1900—as a means to weigh gold mined by the Akan and traded first westward and then across the Sahara to North Africa, and later with the Portuguese and Dutch.

Copper alloy

Arts of Africa