34 UMMA Objects
Sort by


Chinese (Chinese (culture or style))
Bead (1 of a set of 5)
8973 BCE
Museum purchase from the collection of Max Loehr
1960/2.99

Pipe
1900 – 1987
Gift of Douglas and Mary Kelley
1987/1.346
A pipe with a bronze pipe bowl attached to a long, thin wooden pipe stem. There is a small piece of cloth where the pipe bowl meets the stem. The pipe bowl is decorated with spiral designs. 
Pipe
1900 – 1987
Gift of Douglas and Mary Kelley
1987/1.347
A pipe with a thin, wooden stem and a cast brass bowl. The pipe bowl is decorated with various geometric designs and has a small conical base. 
Pipe
1890 – 1920
Gift of Dr. James and Vivian Curtis
2000/2.28
A cast brass pipe bowl with a leaf design around the stem end and a design of horizontal grooves around the bottom, near the small round base. 
Pipe Bowl
1890 – 1920
Gift of Dr. James and Vivian Curtis
2000/2.30
Terracotta pipe bowl in a cylindrical shape. The body of the bowl is covered with 'spider-motif' decorations knobs. Another smaller, cylindrical projection—where the pipe stem would attach—is undecorated. 
Pipe Bowl
1900 – 1950
Gift of Dr. James and Vivian Curtis
2000/2.116

Chinese (Chinese (culture or style))
Bead (1 of a set of 5)
8973 BCE
Museum purchase from the collection of Max Loehr
1960/2.100

Songye (Songye)
Comb with Head
1900 – 1983
Museum purchase made possible by the Betty J. Lockett Memorial Fund
1983/1.155

Japanese (Japanese (culture or style))
Comb (pair with 2003/1.374)
1867 – 1899
Gift of Keiko Takeshita, in memory of her father
2003/1.373
A flat wooden stick coming to a point at each end. It has oval and tear-drop shaped abstract carvings on the surface with diagonal lines at the end.
Ainu
Ikupasuy (Prayer Stick)
1867 – 1932
Gift of Mrs. Caroline J. Plumer
1991/1.79
A flat wooden stick coming to a point at each end. It has groups of three vertical lines at each end  and the middle of the stick.
Ainu
Ikupasuy (Prayer Stick)
1867 – 1932
Gift of Mrs. Caroline J. Plumer
1991/1.80
A flat wooden stick coming to a point at each end. At each end as well as the middle of the stick, there are patches of thinly curled strips of wood.
Ainu
Ikupasuy (Prayer Stick)
1867 – 1932
Gift of Mrs. Caroline J. Plumer
1991/1.82
Loading…