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Pipe
On View In:
Gallery 260
Artist:   Unknown  
Title:   Pipe  
Date:   c. 1200  
Medium:   Stone  
Dimensions:   7 5/8 x 5 1/8 x 9 in. (19.37 x 13.02 x 22.86 cm)  
Credit Line:   The Putnam Dana McMillan Fund  
Location:   Gallery 260  

Chiefly warfare spread among the societies across the middle of North America beginning around 1000 CE. The rulers struggled for power and prestige, battling against neighboring chiefdoms for supremacy. Conflict permeated all aspects of life and as a result was reflected in the art produced at that time. This pipe represents a prisoner taken in war, and its large size indicates that it had ceremonial use as a shared smoking device. It depicts a defeated warrior deprived of all marks of rank and privilege except for his beaded forelock of hair, bound helplessly into a humiliating position. Objects such as this pipe were used ritually to ensure victory against one's enemies.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Unknown  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Inscription on bottom at back, in black: [HL 6718]  
Classification:   Stone (Do Not Use)  
Physical Description:   kneeling or crouching figure with arms at sides; face jutting forward; frowning expression; knot on top of head, PR side  
Creation Place:   North America, United States, Mississippi Valley region, Oklahoma,  
Accession #:   2004.118  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts  

 


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