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© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
Bowl with Figures, Ocheogwu Shrine
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University. Photo by Michael McKelvey.
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University. Photo by Michael McKelvey.
ClassificationsAfrican Art

Bowl with Figures, Ocheogwu Shrine

Place CreatedNigeria, Africa
CultureIgbo
Datelate 19th-early 20th Century
MediumClay
Credit LineEx coll. William S. Arnett
Dimensions11 7/8 x 11 7/16 in. (30.2 x 29 cm)
Object number1994.004.785
Label TextThese vessels are from northeastern Igboland, in Nigeria. Bowls of this type are shrines called ocheogwu, which means "pot of medicine." They were installed in gardens or near the entrances to the homes of blacksmiths and diviners. Perched on the rim of this ocheogwu shrine are sets of male/female pairs. Not all ocheogwu shrines contain figurative images. However, if divination (a process that seeks to foresee events and garner hidden knowledge) reveals that the deity of the shrine wishes one, vessels like these will be created. The figures are therefore the potter's personal interpretation of the deity's request. Called ntekpe, or "children of the shrine," the figures serve as guardians of the bowl's contents. The vessels were used to hold purified water, sometimes mixed with medicines. The water was obtained from rivers and streams associated with the deity to whom the shrine was dedicated.
Exhibition HistoryThree Rivers of Nigeria: Art of the Lower Niger, Cross, and Benue from the Collection of William and Robert Arnett, The High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia, 1978
MCCM Permanent Collection Installation, May 11, 1993 - July 1994
Art of Nigeria from the William S. Arnett Collection, Michael C. Carlos Museum, October 15, 1994 - January 2, 1995
Five Continents-Nine Millennia, Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport, International Concourse E, March 1995 - November 1996
The Art of Collecting: Recent Acquisitions at the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Michael C. Carlos Museum, November 8, 1997 - January 4, 1998
Spirited Vessels: Creation and Ritual in African Ceramics, Michael C. Carlos Museum, February 7 - April 11, 2004
Divine Intervention: African Art and Religion, Michael C. Carlos Museum, February 5 - December 4, 2011
Published ReferencesMarcilene K. Wittmer and William Arnett, Three Rivers of Nigeria: Art of the Lower Niger, Cross, and Benue (Atlanta: The High Museum of Art, 1978), 109, number 256.
MCCM Newsletter, December 2003 - February 2004.
ProvenanceEx coll. William Arnett (1939-2020), Atlanta, Georgia, from at least 1978.
Status
Not on view
Collections
  • African Art
© Bruce M. White, 2010.
late 19th-early 20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2005.
1539-1077 BCE
© Bruce M. White, 2016.
early-mid 20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2006.
late 19th-early 20th Century
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University
722-332 BCE
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
late 19th-early 20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2022.
1939-1760 BCE