Gold Weight: Bird (Sankofa)

18th–19th century
Not on view
Beginning in the fourteenth century, the Akan engaged in extensive trade with both the Portuguese and Spanish along the west coast of Africa, which subsequently came to be known as the "Gold Coast." The Akan used differing and complicated systems of measurement for trade with European and Islamic traders. In Akan society, gold was intimately associated with authority, royalty, and the sacred. Its lavish use in regalia and ornament was a prominent feature of Akan court ceremony. This and two other related gold weights reflect the wealth and breadth of Akan metallurgic virtuosity and take the form of a bird with its head turned back to its tail, known as sankofa, a chair, and a chicken head.

In Akan society, a great deal of importance is placed on verbal eloquence and the artful interpretation of proverbs in expression. Proverbs are the source of imagery for many forms of Akan visual art, including gold weights. The sankofa image is derived from the Akan proverb that states, "There is nothing wrong with learning from hindsight." The motif may be based on a mythical bird that flies forwards with its head turned backwards, or it may be based on a bird that reaches behind it for food.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Gold Weight: Bird (Sankofa)
  • Artist: Akan artist
  • Date: 18th–19th century
  • Geography: Ghana
  • Culture: Akan peoples
  • Medium: Brass
  • Dimensions: Height 1-3/4 in.
  • Classification: Metal-Implements
  • Credit Line: Gift of Ernst Anspach, 1994
  • Object Number: 1994.312.16
  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

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