Headrest (Musawu)

Description

As an emblem of his combined political and spiritual responsibilities, a Yaka chief wore a hat of knotted, netted, and woven raffia that was charged with medicinal ingredients. An elaborately carved neckrest served as another part of his insignia. While it served the practical purpose of protecting the chief’s headgear while he slept, the imagery of this example—which may have held medicines in its interior—likely reflects the Yaka buildings on stilts that housed powerful ritual objects.

Provenance

Raoul Blondiau, Brussels, Belgium, by 1925 [acquired between 1900 to 1925 according to Blondiau-Theatre Arts Collection, exh. cat. 1927]; sold to Theatre Arts, Inc. (Theatre Arts Monthly), New York, N.Y., Nov. 1926 [according to Blondiau-Theatre Arts Collection, exh. cat. 1927; Deacon 1981]; sold to the Art Institute, 1928.

Headrest (Musawu)

Yaka

Late 19th to early 20th century

Accession Number

88693

Medium

Wood and pigment

Dimensions

16.6 × 17.8 × 4 cm (6 9/16 × 7 1/16 × 1 5/8 in.)

Classification

furniture

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of George F. Harding