
Cleveland Museum of Art
Pot Lid
- Date
- 1900s
- Medium
- Plant fiber
- Culture
- Africa, Southern Africa, South Africa, Zulu-style maker
- Department
- African Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This large, beautifully shaped vessel was used for the serving of beer, an essential component of Zulu hospitality. Undecorated vessels were for private household use, and ornamented examples were reserved for guests. Zulu pottery is produced by women, and is typically thin-walled, with a burnished black surface. Decoration may be incised around the shoulder, as in this example, or may consist of raised bumps that resemble body scarification. The basketry lid protects the vessel's contents from flies or debris; contemporary pot lids are often woven of telephone wire with a colorful plastic coating
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Lidded Pot
Cleveland Museum of Art

Pot
Cleveland Museum of Art

Pot
Cleveland Museum of Art

Beer pot
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Ritual Vessel
Art Institute of Chicago

Vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Lead-Glazed Jug
Getty Museum

Lidded Vessel with Loop Handles (lid)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Water Transport Jar
Cleveland Museum of Art

Palm Wine Vessel (kuh mendu)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Vessel with Knobbed Lid (lid)
Cleveland Museum of Art