Woven Legacies: Innovation & Tradition

Timed Online Auction, 2 - 24 February 2025

Vintage baskets from southern Africa: The collection of Dr Elizabeth Terry
About the Session

This selection of vintage baskets comes from the collection of Dr.Elizabeth Terry, a social scientist with a special interest in craft development. It marks a historic moment, being the first time a collection of this kind has come to market. Originating from Southern and Central Africa, these baskets demonstrate how everyday objects—once used for practical purposes like storing food, sifting grain, and carrying goods—transform over time into cultural artifacts and works of art.


Sold for

ZAR 2 345
Lot 75
  • Bosenyegele Mpuseng; Yei winnowing basket, 1990
  • Bosenyegele Mpuseng; Yei winnowing basket, 1990
  • Bosenyegele Mpuseng; Yei winnowing basket, 1990


Lot Estimate
ZAR 2 000 - 2 200
Selling Price
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
ZAR 2 345
Location
Cape Town

About this Item

Ngamiland District, Botswana 20th century
Yei winnowing basket, 1990
Hyphaene petersiana palm for binding material and Cocculus hirsutus vine for the inner core with 'Knees of the Tortoise' design
7cm high, 33cm diameter

Notes

Bosenyegele Mpuseng was born in Danega, the lands area of Nokaneng on the western side of the Okavango Delta. She learned how to make baskets as a teenager by watching other weavers. Once in a while she buys the mokola palm from other people but travels deep into the Delta to obtain the materials to dye the palm.

This particular rendition of this Knees of the Tortoise design is very unusual in that the edges have been made to look ‘feathery’ by taking a stitch with a coloured strip of mokola palm outside the edge of the ‘knees’, which make this a unique collector’s piece. The coiling technique here uses close, simple over-sewing over two coils, alternating at each stitch, and catching the next row with a small ‘stitch’. The dark brown colour is obtained by boiling the palm fibre with Euclea divinorum root bark. The red-brown colour is achieved by using a dye bath made with the tree bark of Berchemia discolor; the lighter shades come from progressively weaker dye baths.

- Dr Elizabeth Terry

Provenance

Dr Elizabeth Terry Collection.

View all Bosenyegele Mpuseng lots for sale in this auction