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Ankush (elephant goad)
Ankush (elephant goad)

Ankush (elephant goad)

Dateca. 1600 -1700
Label TextIn India, elephants were the prerogative of the king, ridden in battle, on hunting expeditions, and during parades. Highly intelligent but also dangerous, elephants were kept at court, where they were trained, cared for, and driven by a mahout, a man from a family of elephant professionals, who used a tool called an ankush to command the elephant through a complex language of pokes and jabs. The ankush eventually took on the status of a royal emblem.
Object number54.38
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Boundless: Stories of Asian Art, Feb. 8, 2020 - ongoing.Published ReferencesFoong, Ping, Xiaojin Wu, and Darielle Mason. "An Asian Art Museum Transformed." Orientations vol. 51, no. 3 (May/June 2020): p. 56, reproduced fig. 15.
Credit LineGift of Mrs. John C. Atwood, Jr.
Dimensions32 x 8 in. (81.3 x 20.32 cm)
MediumSteel with gilding, copper with gilding, rock crystal
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Indian
ca. 1650-1900
Object number: 69.16
Inro: Gold lacquer with silver flower
Japanese
early 19th century
Object number: 55.50
Face of the Bhairava
Nepalese
1809–1810
Object number: 69.143
Reliquary casket
French, probably Limoges
ca. 1200 - 1225
Object number: 49.38
Pyx
French, probably Limoges
mid 13th century
Object number: 49.39
Crozier with Saint Michael slaying the dragon
French, probably Limoges
mid-13th century
Object number: 52.103
Crucifix
French, probably Limoges
ca. 1200
Object number: 46.32
Circular box
Nepalese
ca. 1801-1900
Object number: 65.100
Clear rock crystal brush rest
Chinese
19th century
Object number: 2001.1071
Photo: Paul Macapia
Chinese
10th - late 13th century
Object number: 35.17
Japanese
ca. 1900
Object number: 67.123