Headrest
MOA: University of British Columbia
3420/77
Headrest, or stool, carved from a single piece of wood. The headrest has a large solid cone base with a small concave surface on top. Designs are incised in bands around the circumference - two sections of lines.
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Narrative
From the collection of Dr. Arap Diop. Tchuemegne acquired headrests 3420/70-78 from Diop, in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
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History Of Use
Headrests, also called neck rests. Used when sleeping or resting; meant to support the head at the junction of the neck and head when lying down. Usually a personal object; they are portable and may also be used as a stool. In some societies, headrests were thought to channel ancestral communications through dreams.
- Type of Item headrest
- Culture Gurage
- Material wood
- Measurements height 15.0 cm, width 14.0 cm, depth 13.0 cm (overall)
- Previous Owner Richard Tchuemegne
- Received from Richard Tchuemegne, Michael O'Brian Family Foundation, Museum of Anthropology Exhibitions Budget
- Made in Ethiopia
- Ownership Date before February 5, 2020
- Acquisition Date on February 5, 2020
- Condition fair
- Accession Number 3420/0077