Nr. 102019221

Eine Holzskulptur - Urhobo - Nigeria (Ohne mindestpreis)
Nr. 102019221

Eine Holzskulptur - Urhobo - Nigeria (Ohne mindestpreis)
A Urhobo Maternity, Nigeria, collected in Delta State of Southern region.
This mother-and-child figure from the Urhobo people of southern Nigeria, collected in Delta State, exemplifies the distinctive sculptural language associated with Urhobo carving traditions. Seated on a plain, unadorned chair, the voluminous female figure, with her powerful thighs and prominently modeled buttocks, projects an imposing physical presence. The emphasis on corporeal fullness should not be understood as mere naturalism; rather, it articulates ideals of maturity, fertility, and social as well as biological potency.
The slightly forward-leaning posture is characteristic of Urhobo figural sculpture. The torso inclines subtly, creating a sense of contained dynamism—poised between stillness and latent movement. The firmly planted legs anchor the figure to the ground, conveying stability and rootedness, values deeply embedded within Urhobo social and spiritual frameworks. This compositional balance between mass and inclination produces a sculptural tension that animates the otherwise static seated pose.
The hands of the mother are large and emphatically carved, holding the suckling child with a gesture that is at once protective and authoritative. Such disproportionate treatment of the hands is a significant stylistic feature, underscoring agency, nurturance, and generative power. The child, rendered in smaller scale and closely attached to the maternal body, reinforces the visual hierarchy between mother and infant, emphasizing dependence and continuity.
Particularly notable is the treatment of the head and gaze. As in many African maternity figures, the mother’s eyes are not directed toward the nursing child but instead gaze outward, seemingly into space. This detachment should not be read as emotional distance; rather, it suggests an orientation toward a metaphysical realm. The expression, often restrained and introspective, situates motherhood within a broader cosmological order in which fertility, ancestral presence, and spiritual protection intersect. In Urhobo contexts, such figures were frequently embedded in ritual practice, where the carved form functioned as a vessel for immaterial forces.
The formal economy of the composition—the simplicity of the chair, the clear articulation of bodily volumes, the prioritization of mass over intricate detail—heightens the sculpture’s plastic coherence. Ornamentation is subdued in favor of volumetric clarity. The surface retains traces of carving, allowing the materiality of the wood to remain perceptible and integral to the work’s aesthetic impact.
Within the broader corpus of Urhobo art, a tradition shaped through cultural exchange with neighboring groups in the Niger Delta region, maternity figures occupy a central iconographic position. They do not merely depict an individual mother and child but materialize collective ideals of female strength, continuity, and spiritual mediation. This sculpture thus stands as a compelling example of how Urhobo artists synthesized physical monumentality, formal restraint, and metaphysical resonance into a powerful visual statement.
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