| Object Title | Ibadadun |
| Object Number | 2026-4-1 |
| Current Location | Collections Storage |
| Culture | Yoruba |
| Provenience | Nigeria | Ibadan |
| Culture Area | Yoruba |
| Date Made | circa 1970 CE |
| Section | African |
| Materials | Cotton | Indigo Dye |
| Technique | Dyed | Hand Painted |
| Iconography | Spoon | Flower | Umbrella | Snake | Scorpion | Ostrich | Duck | Bird |
| Inscription Language | Yoruba Language |
| Description | Adire Yoruba textile called "Ibadadun" meaning beautiful/sweet. Made on a manufactured cotton cloth which is hand-painted with multiple patterned squares using cassava starch. After drying, it is dyed with indigo in above-ground dye pots. The more times the cloth is dipped in indigo, the darker the background and the more vivid the pattern. The pattern is revealed after the cassava starch is beaten off the dried-out cloth. Patterns on this textile include seven spoons, flowers, umbrellas, snakes, scorpions, ostriches, ducks, birds, ladles, columns of Mapo Hall (Ibadan City Hall), cocoa leaves, chieftaincy leaves, calabashes, Islamic prayer boards, and the "world on its side" (a geometric design). |
| Length | 187.96 cm |
| Width | 171.45 cm |
| Credit Line | Gift of Dr. Sandra T. Barnes, 2026 |
| Other Number | #1 - Collector Number |
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