Artwork Page for Sandal (mtalawanda / mtawanda) or Clog (kiatu cha mti)

Details / Information for Sandal (mtalawanda / mtawanda) or Clog (kiatu cha mti)

Sandal (mtalawanda / mtawanda) or Clog (kiatu cha mti)

c 1800s
Measurements
Overall: 29 x 10 x 6.3 cm (11 7/16 x 3 15/16 x 2 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
108A African
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Did You Know?

This distinctive footwear traveled from Southeast Asia and the Middle East to Africa, first to the Swahili Coast and then further inland to parts of Central Africa. The deity Krishna wears similar shoes (paduka) in an eighteenth-century Indian miniature painting (2003.344).

Description

Common in the Indian Ocean region, wooden sandals changed meaning across place and time. This pair’s base elevates the foot as the toes grip an antelope-shaped peg (msuruaki). Crisp geometric sole designs suggest they were rarely worn. East African elites and merchants once had exclusive rights to wooden shoes, wearing elaborate ones only for portraits. Formerly enslaved people living along the coast wore simpler ones from the 1840s onward, adopting elite footwear to assert their liberation. However, slave traders like the Zanzibari “Tippu Tip” (c. 1832–1905) likely brought mitalawanda to Central Africa; stylistic elements of this pair hail from that region.
A dark brown wood carving features a curved horizontal platform supported by two thick, rounded bases. The top is etched with concentric rings, while vertical ridges decorate the supports. A post rises from the left, topped with a jutting animal head featuring a pointed snout and tiny white bead eyes. A collar of carved semi-circles rings the post, completing the dark, weathered sculpture.

Sandal (mtalawanda / mtawanda) or Clog (kiatu cha mti)

c 1800s

Africa, Central Africa, Democratic Republic of Congo, unidentified carver

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