en træskulptur - voodoo - Fon - Benin (Ingen mindstepris)

02
dage
16
timer
40
minutter
36
sekunder
Nuværende bud
€ 20
Ingen mindstepris
Julien Gauthier
Ekspert
Udvalgt af Julien Gauthier

Ti års erfaring med historiske våben, rustninger og afrikansk kunst.

Estimat  € 150 - € 200
36 andre mennesker holder øje med dette objekt
BE
€ 20
NL
€ 15
BE
€ 10

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En trækuffe af træ fra Benin, tilskrevet Fon-folket og kendt som en voodoo-fetich-figur, 27 cm høj, 400 g tung, fremstillet af træ og knogler, i rimelig stand og solgt uden stand.

AI-assisteret oversigt

Beskrivelse fra sælger

This fetish figure from the Ouidah region of southern Benin is situated within the cultural context of the Fon people and the Vodun traditions prevalent there. Ouidah is considered one of the central historical centers of Vodun, where material objects are understood as active carriers of spiritual forces and integrated into complex ritual systems. Fetish figures of this kind function less as representations and more as "condensed agents of action" that enable protection, binding, and control over invisible forces. Incl stand.

The sculpture depicts a figure bound frontally, its back fixed to a wall-like structure. The figure's body is further stabilized and symbolically bound by cords. This intertwining of fixation and physicality alludes to concepts of control and the ritual containment of spiritual potential. The cuboid-shaped face with its slightly open mouth appears reduced and concentrated, thus drawing attention to the figure's functional presence.

A lock affixed to the chest, held by the figure's arms, constitutes a central iconographic element and can be interpreted in the context of protection, closure, or spiritual "sealing." From the hips down, the body merges into a form that blends seamlessly with the back wall, culminating in a pointed structure that visually integrates the figure into its supporting structure.

The dark ground with red and white dots, along with numerous abrasions, cracks, and holes, attests to intensive ritual use. In its material density, the figure articulates an aesthetic of bound efficacy, in which body and object are inextricably intertwined.

Literature (Selection)
Blier, Suzanne Preston: African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. Chicago, 1995.
Herskovits, Melville J.: Dahomey: An Ancient West African Kingdom. New York, 1938.
Bay, Edna G.: Wives of the Leopard. Charlottesville, 1998.
Rush, Dana: Vodun in Coastal Benin. Art Journal, 2008.

CAB47203

#afrohemian26

Sælger's Historie

Oversat af Google Oversæt

This fetish figure from the Ouidah region of southern Benin is situated within the cultural context of the Fon people and the Vodun traditions prevalent there. Ouidah is considered one of the central historical centers of Vodun, where material objects are understood as active carriers of spiritual forces and integrated into complex ritual systems. Fetish figures of this kind function less as representations and more as "condensed agents of action" that enable protection, binding, and control over invisible forces. Incl stand.

The sculpture depicts a figure bound frontally, its back fixed to a wall-like structure. The figure's body is further stabilized and symbolically bound by cords. This intertwining of fixation and physicality alludes to concepts of control and the ritual containment of spiritual potential. The cuboid-shaped face with its slightly open mouth appears reduced and concentrated, thus drawing attention to the figure's functional presence.

A lock affixed to the chest, held by the figure's arms, constitutes a central iconographic element and can be interpreted in the context of protection, closure, or spiritual "sealing." From the hips down, the body merges into a form that blends seamlessly with the back wall, culminating in a pointed structure that visually integrates the figure into its supporting structure.

The dark ground with red and white dots, along with numerous abrasions, cracks, and holes, attests to intensive ritual use. In its material density, the figure articulates an aesthetic of bound efficacy, in which body and object are inextricably intertwined.

Literature (Selection)
Blier, Suzanne Preston: African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. Chicago, 1995.
Herskovits, Melville J.: Dahomey: An Ancient West African Kingdom. New York, 1938.
Bay, Edna G.: Wives of the Leopard. Charlottesville, 1998.
Rush, Dana: Vodun in Coastal Benin. Art Journal, 2008.

CAB47203

#afrohemian26

Sælger's Historie

Oversat af Google Oversæt

Detaljer

Navn på indfødtes objekt
voodoo
Etnisk gruppe/ kultur
Fon
Oprindelsesland
Benin
Materiale
Knogle, Træ
Sold with stand
Nej
Stand
Rimelig stand
Titel på kunstværk
A wooden sculpture
Højde
27 cm
Vægt
400 g
TysklandBekræftet
6201
Genstande solgt
99,7%
protop

Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers

Unternehmen:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Repräsentant:
Wolfgang Jaenicke
Adresse:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
GERMANY
Telefonnummer:
+493033951033
Email:
w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
USt-IdNr.:
DE241193499

AGB

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Widerrufsbelehrung

  • Frist: 14 Tage sowie gemäß den hier angegebenen Bedingungen
  • Rücksendkosten: Käufer trägt die unmittelbaren Kosten der Rücksendung der Ware
  • Vollständige Widerrufsbelehrung

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