pipe bowl and stem
pipe bowl and stem
pipe bowl and stem
A large wooden pipe bowl with engraved designs and a puzzle stem that does not fit the hole in the bowl. Decorated with fish, serpentine, hourglass motifs. Probably Anishinaabe. Attributed to mid- nineteenth century by comparison with a similar pipe collected in 1861. Part of the Charles Stephens Collection, it was acquired by the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1945 through the daughter in law of Charles Stephens, Mrs. Owen Stephens.
Stylistic features: the chip carving along one edge, the asymmetricality of design, the chained lozenge motifs and style of the engraved images. There is also a resemblance in scale and in the use of wood to a pipe bowl to Chief Paqua's pipe bowl (Missisauga). It is also reminiscent of the puzzle stem and one piece pipes in NMAI and Hunterian. The engraving style is also seen on Minnesota Dakota materials dating before the 1860s.
Museum documentation.
Read More About This Relative
wood (the catalogue card states the stem is made of ash); paint, red and blue-green paint.
An elbow shaped pipe bowl with a curved contour. It has shallow convex surfaces and is engraved motifs which are different on both sides. The motifs are filled with blue-green and red pigments. There is a line of eight small holes inside the bowl which may have been for attachment of lead inlay. The stem is a flat puzzle stem pierced with hourglasses, circles, and rectangles, with the interior surfaces coloured with vermillion pigment. On each side, a band of hog-file finished wood runs longitudinally along the centre.
Fish; a serpentine line with a spiral at the end; three leafed motif, triangles (?); a three-leafed clover; chain of seven lozenges or diamonds; highly stylized fish (sturgeon?) over the clover; hourglasses; circles; rectangle.
The fish motif could be a dodem.
The style of engraved motifs on the bowl and the use of red vermillion pigment bear a close resemblance to 45-15-1422, collected in 1861.
Provenance
Part of the Charles Stephens Collection, it was acquired by the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1945 through the daughter in law of Charles Stephens, Mrs. Owen Stephens.
About This GRASAC Record
small black stone pipe bowl with slightly flared cylindrical bowl, short pointed prow, and rectangular sectioned shank, lead inlay on top of bowl and end of shank
43.0703, -80.1184
Could be Anishinaabe or Minnesota Dakota (David Penney).