Nr. 104195149

En terrakottaskulptur. - Bankoni - Mali (Ingen mindstepris)
Nr. 104195149

En terrakottaskulptur. - Bankoni - Mali (Ingen mindstepris)
A Bankoni terracotta, Mopti region, Mali.
This terracotta figure from the Bankoni region of central Mali belongs to one of the most important ceramic sculptural traditions of the Inland Niger Delta. Produced within the broader cultural sphere of the Mopti region, Bankoni terracottas are generally associated with pre-Islamic societies that flourished along the Niger River between the late first and early second millennium CE. Although precise archaeological attribution remains difficult due to extensive undocumented excavation and dispersal through the art market during the twentieth century, such figures are commonly linked to the cultural horizons conventionally identified as Tellem, Djenné, or related regional traditions preceding or overlapping the expansion of the Mali Empire. Their survival reflects the remarkable durability of fired clay in the semi-arid Sahelian environment, where terracotta became a privileged medium for commemorative, ritual, and possibly funerary sculpture. Please note that without any laboratory tests, the attribution and datation is provided for reference only, based on our expertise in the field. Therefore, the piece stays subject to authentication.
Bankoni terracottas are distinguished by their restrained but highly expressive formal language. Elongated proportions, simplified anatomical structures, attenuated limbs, and rhythmic surface modeling produce figures that appear simultaneously corporeal and abstracted. Seated postures, raised arms, equestrian imagery, maternal figures, and representations of afflicted bodies recur throughout the corpus, suggesting an iconographic vocabulary connected to authority, protection, fertility, healing, and ancestral mediation. Surface textures, scarification patterns, jewelry, and coiffures often preserve important information concerning status, identity, and social differentiation within medieval Sahelian societies. The sculptural emphasis lies less in individualized portraiture than in the articulation of states of being: vigilance, suffering, concentration, authority, or spiritual transformation.
The Inland Niger Delta occupied a crucial position within trans-Saharan exchange systems linking West Africa to North Africa and the Mediterranean world. Urban centers such as Djenné and Timbuktu later emerged within this commercial landscape, but the terracotta traditions of the Mopti region demonstrate that complex artistic and ritual cultures flourished long before the consolidation of Islamic scholarly states. Archaeological evidence suggests that many terracotta figures were originally deposited in architectural contexts, sanctuaries, burial environments, or sacred landscapes, where they may have functioned as intermediaries between living communities and ancestral or spiritual forces. Their frequent fragmentation reflects not only the effects of time but also the ritual histories of use, burial, exposure, and rediscovery.
The modern history of Bankoni terracottas is inseparable from broader debates concerning archaeology, authenticity, and the circulation of African antiquities. Beginning in the mid-twentieth century, large numbers of terracottas from the Inland Niger Delta entered European and North American collections through uncontrolled excavation, often without archaeological documentation. As a result, chronological interpretation and contextual analysis remain complicated by the absence of stratigraphic evidence. Nonetheless, these sculptures continue to occupy a central position within the study of African art history because they challenge older assumptions that monumental sculptural traditions in sub-Saharan Africa emerged only in relatively recent periods. Their technical sophistication, compositional coherence, and conceptual complexity attest to long-standing traditions of ceramic production and ritual representation in the medieval Sahel.
The visual power of Bankoni terracottas derives partly from the tension between permanence and fragility inherent in fired earth. Clay, drawn from the riverine landscape and transformed through heat, retains visible traces of the hand while simultaneously evoking erosion, burial, and archaeological recovery. Many surviving figures bear encrustations, mineral deposits, abrasions, or losses that register their prolonged presence within the ground. These material transformations have become integral to their historical and aesthetic reception, reinforcing their status not merely as sculptures but as excavated witnesses to vanished social worlds.
References
Roderick J. McIntosh, The Peoples of the Middle Niger: The Island of Gold, Blackwell Publishers, Oxford, 1998.
Susan Keech McIntosh, Excavations at Jenné-Jeno, Hambarketolo, and Kaniana (Inland Niger Delta, Mali), University of California Press, Berkeley, 1995.
Jean Laude, The Arts of Black Africa, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1973.
Ezra Kate, Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1988.
Christopher Roy, Kilengi: African Art from the Bareiss Family Collection, University of Iowa Museum of Art, Iowa City, 1999.
John A. Shoup III, “The Archaeology of the Inland Niger Delta,” African Archaeological Review, Vol. 3, 1985, pp. 123–142.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre, “Old Towns of Djenné,” consulted 2026.
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