Photo of collection object Gold-weight (abrammuo): scorpion
Akan. Gold-weight (abrammuo): scorpion, 19th-20th century. Cast brass, 1 1/4 x 1/8in. (3.2 x 0.3cm). Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin H. Williams, 88.192.66. Creative Commons-BY.

Gold-weight (abrammuo): scorpion

19th-20th century

Akan

Arts of Africa

Gold was extremely important in the economic and political life of the Akan kingdoms of southern Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire. Until the mid-nineteenth century, gold dust was the primary form of currency in the region. In order to measure precise amounts of gold, an elaborate system of weights, usually made of cast brass, developed by the seventeenth century. Gold weights took many forms: simple geometric shapes; animals, such as leopards or birds; objects, such as chairs or swords; and human figures. The figures, animals, and objects are often associated with proverbs. The sankofa bird, with head turned backward, represents the proverb “One must turn to the past to move forward.”
Maker/Artist
Akan
Classification
Sculpture
Formatted Medium
Cast brass
Medium
cast, brass
Locations
Place made: Ashanti Region, Ghana
Dimensions
1 1/4 x 1/8in. (3.2 x 0.3cm)
Departments
Arts of Africa
Accession Number
88.192.66
Credit Line
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin H. Williams
Rights Statement
Creative Commons-BY
Dominant Colors

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