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Description
A striking expression of pre-colonial value systems, this Igbo iron currency knife from southeastern Nigeria operates at the intersection of …
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A striking expression of pre-colonial value systems, this Igbo iron currency knife from southeastern Nigeria operates at the intersection of economy, ritual, and sculpture. Forged by hand, its elongated shaft rises into a sinuous, hook-like crest, punctuated by a lateral spur—an assertive, almost calligraphic gesture in iron. The surface bears a dense, time-earned patina: pitted, oxidized, and richly tonal, revealing both the material’s endurance and its circulation through human exchange.
Before the widespread introduction of coinage, many African societies developed highly sophisticated systems of currency using objects of intrinsic and symbolic value—iron being among the most important. In Igbo culture, such currency forms were not merely transactional tools but carriers of status, social contracts, and ceremonial meaning. Iron knives like this example functioned as units of wealth used in bride price negotiations, trade agreements, and rites of passage. Their form was deliberately distinctive—recognizable, transportable, and difficult to counterfeit—embedding both trust and identity within the object itself.
What elevates these works today is precisely this duality: they are at once instruments of economy and autonomous sculptural forms. The abstraction feels remarkably contemporary—echoing modernist line, balance, and negative space—yet it emerges from a deeply rooted cultural logic. Each example is unique, shaped by regional blacksmithing traditions and the hand of its maker, making authenticity and variation central to their appeal.
Increasingly sought after by collectors, African currency objects like this Igbo knife resonate across multiple disciplines: ethnographic artifact, design object, and minimalist sculpture. Their rarity, material honesty, and historical depth position them within a growing canon of global collectible design—where provenance, craftsmanship, and conceptual clarity converge.
A powerful, vertical presence—quiet yet assertive—this piece anchors a space with both narrative and form, embodying a system of value far older, and arguably more poetic, than money itself.
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- Dimensions
- 8ʺW × 6ʺD × 24ʺH
- Styles
- African
- Traditional
- Art Subjects
- Other
- Period
- Early 20th Century
- Country of Origin
- Nigeria
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Iron
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Brown
- Condition Notes
- Fair Fair less
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