Kirdi Forged Iron Currency – Sculptural Tribal Currency Blade, West & Central Cameroon, 19th Century (Mounted) - Lot 900
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Description
Before the widespread adoption of coinage, many African societies developed sophisticated systems of exchange using forged metal objects as currency. These iron forms—used in marriage transactions, ceremonial exchanges, and inter-community trade—functioned not merely as economic instruments, but as symbols of wealth, status, and social structure. In this context, currency was not abstracted into coin; it was embodied in material, labor, and form.
This exceptional Kirdi iron currency from West and Central Cameroon exemplifies that convergence of metallurgy and meaning. Hand-forged in iron, its composition is both architectonic and gestural: a crescent blade arcs upward with tensile energy, counterbalanced by a rhythmic serpentine coil that undulates along the shaft before resolving into a tapered spike.
What distinguishes this example is the refinement of its surface. The metal reveals delicate linear incisions and fine hammered striations throughout—subtle carvings that trace the curvature of the blade and accentuate its contours. These etched markings are not decorative excess; they are controlled articulations of the forging process, evidence of skilled handwork and a deliberate aesthetic language. The textured oxidation and warm iron patina further amplify the relief of these incised details, allowing light to articulate the object’s sculptural topography.
Mounted on a custom black steel base for presentation, the currency reads today as a striking abstract sculpture—minimal, rhythmic, and deeply expressive. Its asymmetry and coiled geometry anticipate modernist abstraction, yet remain grounded in cultural function and ritual economy.
Material: Hand-forged iron
Origin: West & Central Cameroon
Period: 19th century
Presented on custom mount
Raw yet refined. Economic yet sculptural. An artifact where value, craft, and form converge.











