Search | Sitemap | My Museum | Font Size


  Zoom

Explore the Collections

Indian and Himalayan Art

Fish-shaped Container

Made in India, Asia
or Bengal, Bangladesh, Asia
Possibly made in Bihar, India, Asia
or West Bengal, India, Asia
or Orissa, India, Asia

Late 19th to 20th century

Artist/maker unknown, India or Bengali

Copper alloy; resin-thread technique (dhokra)
2 1/2 x 1 1/2 x 4 1/4 inches (6.4 x 3.8 x 10.8 cm)

Currently not on view

1994-148-222

Stella Kramrisch Collection, 1994

Label

This container was made using the dokra technique, in which thin cords of wax-like resin are wrapped around a clay core and then coated with an outer layer of thinner clay. When molten metal replaces the resin and the clay is removed, the resulting piece retains the lattice-like structure of the wrapped cords. Traditionally, women supplied scrap metal to artisans who melted them into dokra images such as deities, animals, coin purses, and ornamental cooking utensils. The women then used these dokra wares in their homes, especially on their home altars. Often the motifs women included in their own art, such as embroidered quilts (kanthas) and ritual paintings, reflect the distinctive crisscross, pierced, or spiraling shapes of dokra objects.

Social Tags [?]

There are currently no user tags associated with this object.

[Add Your Own Tags]