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Serving vessel for food, drinks and guarapo

Popularization note

Many South Americans use gourds, i.e. woody and thick pericarps of some bignonia and cucurbitaceae plants, also known as calebas as everyday objects and musical instruments. The bowl on display is made from the halved fruit of the Calabash tree (Crescentia cujete), grown near the settlements of the Noanamá group (Waunana), inhabiting the San Juan basin, a river flowing into the Pacific Ocean, flowing through the Chocó department in western Colombia. Such vessels are used to serve food and drinks there, including those commonly sipped during feasts, such as guarapo – a fermented drink made from sugar cane juice.

Calabash are collected by men who cut them to the right shape and size, then use a knife to hollow out the white flesh, smooth the inside and leave it to dry for a few weeks. When they are dry, they are decorated by women. The ornamentation, typical of the Noanamá group, is made with a small metal tool, traces of which in the form of shallow and small cuts are visible on the engraved drawings. The patterns depicted on the dishes are primarily geometric and zoomorphic motifs: figures of crayfish, turtles, frogs, lizards, birds; Anthropomorphic drawings are less common.

In addition to the human figure, the bowl is most likely also engraved with a pattern of a land turtle accompanied by a smaller tortoise and a crayfish, which often appears in Noanamá's art. Inside the object there is an inscription "Noanama" – a marking made by Boris Malkin, an anthropologist who conducted field research among Noanamá in the years 1968–1972, from which he obtained the presented gourd.

Katarzyna Findlik-Gawron




Signatures and inscriptions:

Inscription: on the inside of the vessel wall; Noanama

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown
Noanamá

Object type

bowl, calabash (vessel)

Technique

cutting, curving (engraving)

Material

calabash

Origin / acquisition method

purchase

Creation time / dating

1969

Creation / finding place

powstanie: San Juan, dorzecze (Kolumbia), Chocó, departament (Kolumbia)

Owner

The National Museum in Szczecin

Identification number

MNS/EP/2106

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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