Horizontal painting of Pigs and Pangolin
Maker
Unknown artist
Label TextThe colorful Sohrai style of painting relates to the Sohrai harvest festival, one of the Santal people’s primary festivals during which they celebrate the importance of cattle and other wildlife. As part of the celebrations, local artisans create murals on mud walls by dipping their fingertips in paint. Such murals and works on paper contain images welcoming the harvest and honoring both nature and livestock. This image is of a sow (female pig) and piglet, together with a pangolin.
Object number2022.30.1
ProvenanceThe artist (Tribal Women Artists Cooperative, Hazaribagh, India); gifted and sold, via Bulu Iman (Founder, Tribal Women Artists Cooperative), to Joseph Reid (d. 2016), Winthrop, Washington, 2008; bequeathed to Batya Friedman, Seattle, Washington, 2016; to Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, 2022
Photo CreditPhoto: Scott Leen
Credit LineGift of Joseph E. Reid and Batya Friedman
Dimensions23 x 30 3/4 in. (58.4 x 78.1 cm)
MediumSohrai colored in ochre acrylic (earth colors with commercial binders) on paper
Unknown artist
early 21st century
Object number: 2022.30.3
Unknown artist
early 21st century
Object number: 2022.30.6