Oil Lamp thumbnail 1

Oil Lamp

before 1868 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Kabyles are a Berber people who live in Northern Algeria. For more than 200 years Kabyle women have made earthenware objects from locally-dug clay. Kabyle pottery was traditionally made for domestic purposes such as preparing and serving food, storing water and providing light, and for ritual occasions such as births and weddings. Today it is largely decorative and other materials such as plastic, metal and china are used to serve its original practical functions.

This oil lamp was purchased by the V&A in 1868 as part of a group of 51 Kabyle items. Its construction and design are typical. The clay was shaped by hand using the thumb and coiling methods. Before firing, the lamp was decorated with kaolin, coloured oxides and slips (liquid clay), usually in blocks of red and white overlaid by geometric designs applied in black. Pots not intended for use in cooking, like this one, also had a resin applied to give a glazed surface. This gave a yellow colour and ensured that the pot was watertight.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Earthenware, decorated with slips, kaolin and coloured oxides and covered with resin
Brief description
Oil lamp (mesbah), earthenware, Algeria, Grande Kabyle, Djurdjura region (probably Aït Aïssi group), before 1868
Physical description
Earthenware oil lamp with two spouts and three wicks. Decorated in blocks of red and white (resinous glaze makes this appear yellow), the latter overlaid by geometric designs applied in black.
Dimensions
  • Height: 40.5cm
  • Width: 20cm
Style
Object history
Accessions register entry: [Pasted in label] Pottery (a collection of fifty-one specimens). Various domestic objects belonging to the Kabyle Arabs. Painted earthenware. Modern North African. Bought, 30l
[Added by hand in pen] 6 at Burslem Museum
1 each at:- 18
Mansfield, Nottingham, Penzance, Sleaford, Stoke, Torquay, Putney, Rotherham, Selby, Shipley, Stourbridge, Huddersfield, Ipswich, Kendal, Lowestoft, Canterbury, Coventry, Glasgow.
13 at Edinburgh.
5 in Lockers, Rm. 133: 31/34, 28
8 in Crypt
1 in Case 10 B.G.M 31/15
[Added by hand in pen at top of page] 31/3, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20, 26, 32, 35, 39, 41, 43. Transferred permanently to the Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh 21/2771 & 4613.
Production
Grande Kabyle, Djurdjura region (probably Aït Aïssi group)
Summary
The Kabyles are a Berber people who live in Northern Algeria. For more than 200 years Kabyle women have made earthenware objects from locally-dug clay. Kabyle pottery was traditionally made for domestic purposes such as preparing and serving food, storing water and providing light, and for ritual occasions such as births and weddings. Today it is largely decorative and other materials such as plastic, metal and china are used to serve its original practical functions.

This oil lamp was purchased by the V&A in 1868 as part of a group of 51 Kabyle items. Its construction and design are typical. The clay was shaped by hand using the thumb and coiling methods. Before firing, the lamp was decorated with kaolin, coloured oxides and slips (liquid clay), usually in blocks of red and white overlaid by geometric designs applied in black. Pots not intended for use in cooking, like this one, also had a resin applied to give a glazed surface. This gave a yellow colour and ensured that the pot was watertight.
Bibliographic reference
Vincentelli, Moira. Reflections on a Kabyle Pot: Algerian Women and the Decorative Tradition. Journal of Design History. 1989, vol.2, nos. 2 & 3. pp.123-128
Collection
Accession number
31:11-1868

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Record createdMarch 26, 2008
Record URL
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