Art of the Asante Kingdom

The king himself was perceived as a creative force whose dynamic patronage of the arts, along with his health and appearance, were considered an important metaphor for his kingdom’s strength and stability.
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Memorial Head (Nsodie), Terracotta, quartz fragments, Akan peoples
Akan peoples
17th–mid-18th century
Figure: Seated Male With Sword, Wood, kaolin, Asante
Asante
19th–20th century
Ȯkyeame poma (linguist’s staff) with spider’s web and figures, Asante (Akan) artist, Wood, gold foil, nails, Akan
Asante (Akan) artist
19th–early 20th century
Wrapper, Rayon, cotton, Asante
Asante
20th century

In the seventeenth century, the region of West Africa known as the Gold Coast (modern Ghana) was dotted with several small-scale principalities populated by peoples belonging to the Akan cultural group. Linked by trade routes, a shared language, and similar belief systems, these states nonetheless remained separate entities until the early eighteenth century, when Asante, an inland kingdom ruled by a chief named Osei Tutu, embarked on a process of territorial expansion that united them as one kingdom. By 1750, Asante had become a large empire whose borders were roughly congruent with those of Ghana today. Developing an inclusive model of leadership that emphasized points of similarity and adopted traditions from throughout the territory for courtly use, Osei Tutu promoted unity among the peoples over whom he ruled and cultivated a strong national identity that has remained to the present day.

The kingdom’s active role in the gold, cloth, and slave trades brought vast wealth that fostered especially rich artistic traditions. The king himself was perceived as a creative force whose dynamic patronage of the arts, along with his health and appearance, were considered an important metaphor for his kingdom’s strength and stability. The art of Asante, like that of all Akan peoples, wove together the verbal and the visual by illustrating spoken proverbs that communicated accepted truths and practical advice. In courtly art, verbal motifs relating to the cohesion and prosperity of the kingdom were used extensively.


Contributors

Alexander Ives Bortolot
Department of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University

October 2003


Further Reading

Blier, Suzanne Preston. The Royal Arts of Africa: The Majesty of Form. New York: Abrams, 1998.

Cole, Herbert M., and Doran H. Ross. The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1977.


Citation

View Citations

Bortolot, Alexander Ives. “Art of the Asante Kingdom.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/asan_1/hd_asan_1.htm (October 2003)