Wall Accents
Special Offers
Shop by Color
Customer Rating
Style
Brand
Novica
Out of Stock
Sculpted by hand, sese wood intertwines to form the handle of a traditional fork, while a spoon encloses a wood ball. Masks at the top represent the Ghanaian ancestors who used these implements. Chief Carver Nana recreates them as handsome wall sculptures.
Serene features characterize these delightful children who grace a set of spoon and fork. Hand carved from sese wood and burnished with mansion polish, these wall sculptures depict brother and sister. Eric Darko names the set Panyin ni Kakra, names given to twins of Ghana's Akan tribe where they are thought to bring good luck. "Panyin" refers to the older, while "Kakra" denotes the younger.
Bordallo Pinheiro
The Sardine collection by Bordallo Pinheiro results from a collaboration between the earthenware factory of Caldas da Rainha, founded in 1884 by Raphael Bordallo Pinheiro, EGEAC (Lisbon’s cultural and animation municipal entity). And Lisbon’s city council. The original Bordallo Pinheiro’s Sardine, designed in the XIX century, due to its classic three-dimensional nature, became the ideal support for receiving the creative work that EGEAC develops since 2003, within Lisbon’s festivities, which transformed the sardine, iconic fish of Portuguese culture and gastronomy, an international icon of the city and of summer celebrations of the Portuguese capital.