
Cleveland Museum of Art
Hat (laket mishiing) with a pin
- Date
- early 1900s
- Medium
- Raffia, metal, and dye
- Culture
- Africa, Central Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kuba-style maker
- Department
- African Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Titled Kuba men and prominent women wear the laket , a small ornate dome-shaped hat. An essential fashion item of adult men in good social standing, it focuses special attention on the head as a significant marker of individual identity, ethnic affiliation, status, and role in society. This prestige object is secured on the crown of the head with a nine-and-a-half-inch metal pin that pierces through the hat onto a clump of hair. The laket is made from undyed raffia palm fiber that was then coiled into threads and woven. There are two examples of the laket: the plain type with the flat top, and the more elaborate type called the laket mishiing .
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