an african efik brass charger decorated with wild plants dating to the turn of the 19th century.
diameter 430mm
wild plants hold significant, multifaceted importance in efik culture, primarily as staple ingredients in cuisine, vital components of traditional medicine and elements in ritual and social practices. the rim is decorated with a continuous scale design only broken by two filled circles possibly the eyes of an ouroboros, a serpent eating its own tail, forming a continuous circle it represents life, death and rebirth. in efic and broader cross river communities the serpent represents divinity. fertility and water spirits.
large plain brass charger dishes and platters known as neptunes (a brass or copper pan or plate used for the evaporation of sea water to obtain salt) were imported from britain to nigeria and then decorated locally in old calabar. regarded as important prestige items by the local chiefs they were displayed with great ceremony. items of efik decorated brass were also presented by the king and chiefs to important dignitaries and distinguished visitors to the area. these chargers are interesting transcultural aesthetic expressions resulting from a history of european contact .