Hen

Description

Materials used for ritual objects correspond with the status of their owner, or the person it was dedicated to. Men have cast brass roosters, while women have carved wooden hens like this. This egg-shaped bird is covered with patterns formed by parallel lines indicating the bird’s feathers, from fluffy tufts to sleek plumage. Realistically carved, it replicates an animal that would be sacrificed on a woman’s shrine. On an ancestral altar, it sat alongside other objects like rattle staffs. While Benin is patriarchal (men and their male sons lead), women are important; men cannot succeed spiritually or politically without them.

Provenance

Commissioned from the Igbesanmwan, Benin Kingdom (1900s); (Robert L. Stolper gallery, New York City) (no earlier than 1961); Katherine C. White [1929-1980], Gates Mills, OH, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (by at least 1962); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1973–)

Hen

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1900s

Accession Number

1973.221

Medium

wood

Dimensions

Overall: 47.6 cm (18 3/4 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Katherine C. White