Box Item Number: K2.85 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia
Rectangular metal box (part a) with a lid (part b). The box (part a) is plain. The lid (part b) has overall geometric designs in relief that consist of hour-glass-like and x-shapes bordered by lines that are perpendicular to their respective edges.
Used to hold powdered gold (gold dust). Historically made and used by the Akan peoples to hold powdered gold, which was used as the standard currency from the seventeenth to mid-nineteenth centuries. The blacksmiths who produced these boxes were called tounufe.
Cast using the cire-perdue (lost wax) method. The mould is made of beeswax, covered with clay, and then fired. The wax melts and the hollow clay cast is then filled with scraps of copper-based alloy, before being fired for a second time.