AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AWURA POKU
AFRICAN ODYSSEY

AWURA POKU

$269.00

Concentric circles radiate like the sun in this brass necklace. Handcrafted in Côte d'Ivoire by Baule artisans, who are masters at creating highly decorated brass beads using the lost wax casting method. Pale sea-green recycled Ghana glass beads complement this stunning piece.

recycled materials usedMaterials are sustainably sourced

Total Length/circumference: 54 cm

Launch product video

The origin story

The Baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit Ghana and Ivory Coast. Three hundred years ago the Baule people migrated westward from Ghana when the Asante rose to power. The tale of how they broke away from the Asante has been preserved in their oral traditions. During the Asante rise to power, the Baule queen, Awura Poku, was in direct competition with the current Asante king. When the Asante prevailed, the queen led her people away to the land they now occupy. The basic method of lost-wax casting has been widely practiced on the African continent for centuries. West African sculptors were casting brass with this method for several hundred years prior to the arrival of the first Portuguese explorers along the coast in 1484. The lost-wax process that begins with an artist sculpting wax into a desired form. If the artist was making a large gold object, the original model would be wax covering a clay base. Thin layers of clay were applied to the wax surface to accurately capture its texture and details. When fired, the wax melted, leaving a sculptural cavity to be filled with molten metal. Once cooled, the mould was shattered in order to remove the cast object from its clay encasement. Each casting is a unique miniature sculpture. Glass beads are made by the Krobo People of Ghana and are an excellent example of African creative recycling. Coloured bottles are collected, sorted and crushed. The fragments are then poured into individual bead moulds and fired in a kiln made from termite clay and fuelled by firewood and palm kernels that burn at a very high temperature. The hole for the bead is made using a cassava stem that burns up during firing leaving the hole. Once the fused glass cools the resulting beads are washing and polished using sand and water. This labour-intensive process results in each bead being truly unique and hand made. The technique has been used in Africa for centuries.

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