Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields
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shield

1880-1930

Zande people

1989.1096

Not currently on view

plant fiber

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Attribution Incomplete Notice

Collections and items in our institution have incomplete, inaccurate, and/or missing attribution. We are using this notice to clearly identify this material so that it can be updated, or corrected by communities of origin. Our institution is committed to collaboration and partnerships to address this problem of incorrect or missing attribution.

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Open to Collaborate Notice

Our institution is committed to the development of new modes of collaboration, engagement, and partnership with Indigenous peoples for the care and stewardship of past and future heritage collections.

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Traditional Knowledge Notice

The TK Notice is a visible notification that there are accompanying cultural rights and responsibilities that need further attention for any future sharing and use of this material. The TK Notice may indicate that TK Labels are in development and their implementation is being negotiated. For more information about the TK Notice, visit localcontexts.org.

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Artwork Details

Culture
Creation Date
1880-1930
Materials
plant fiber
Object Types
shields
Dimensions

56-1/2 x 11-1/2 x 3-3/4 in.

Accession Number
1989.1096
Credit Line

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Eiteljorg

Copyright
Public Domain
Collection

African Art

Owned by medical missionaries Dr. Royal J. Dye [1874-1966] and Eva Marie Dye [1877-?] {1} while stationed at Bolenge, Democratic Republic of the Congo; {2}; given by Dr. Dye to Mr. and Mrs. Dargitz possibly in the 1940s; sold by (Dr. Robert E. Dargitz [1934-2014]) {3} on 23 November 1981 to Harrison Eiteljorg [1903-1997] of Indianapolis, Indiana; given to the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields in 1989. {1} Dr. and Mrs. Royal Dye were Disciples of Christ and lived in Africa from April 1889- until at least1920s {2} Democratic Republic of the Congo was known as the Belgium Congo at the time the piece was collected {3} Dr. Robert Dargitz was a missionary to the Democratic Republic of the Congo during the 1960s; he then taught Sociology at Franklin College and Butler University until retirement


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Metadata about the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s collection comes from Newfields’ records and research. In some cases, information may be incomplete and research is ongoing. Newfields’ goal is to have as up-to-date metadata as possible, therefore, this information is subject to change. Newfields collections’ metadata is available under a Creative Commons Zero (CC0) waiver, which allows for re-use without legal restrictions.

Artworks that appear in the image file(s) above may be in copyright or have other legal and/or cultural restrictions to their use. For clarity, Newfields does not claim copyright to the image files created by Newfields of artworks in the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s collection. Newfields makes every effort to ascertain the copyright status of artworks in the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s collection. Please refer to the RightsStatements.org statement above for information about the current copyright status of the artwork. Additionally, some artworks may include Local Context’s Notices or Labels that attribute cultural authority of the artwork’s heritage and data.

Additional information about Newfields’ reproduction guidelines can be found in the Licensing Resources.

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