Nr. 102406615

Eine Holzskulptur - Bamana - Mali (Ohne mindestpreis)
Nr. 102406615

Eine Holzskulptur - Bamana - Mali (Ohne mindestpreis)
A Bamana Boliw fetishe sculpture, Mali, collected in the Koutiala region, in shape of the abstraton of an stylized animal without specification, a thick encrusted sacrification patina of many layers.
In the Koutiala region of southern Mali, ritual objects known as boliw (singular boli) occupy a central place within the religious practices of the Bamana. These powerful ritual sculptures are closely associated with the activities of the Komo and related initiation societies that play an important role in regulating spiritual and social life within Bamana communities.
A boli is not a sculpture in the conventional sense but a ritual object whose form develops gradually through ceremonial use. At its core there is often a simple structure of wood, clay, or other organic material. Over time the object is repeatedly covered with layers of sacrificial substances—animal blood, millet porridge, kola nut, honey, earth, and medicinal ingredients—applied during ritual ceremonies. These substances accumulate and harden into a dense crust, producing the dark, heavy, and often irregular surfaces that characterize many boliw.
Examples from the Koutiala region frequently display a compact, sometimes zoomorphic appearance, often suggesting the form of a powerful animal such as a buffalo. The exact shape, however, is less important than the object’s spiritual efficacy. Within Bamana belief, the potency of a boli resides in the accumulation of ritual materials and the sacred knowledge invested in it by initiated specialists. Each offering strengthens the object and renews its capacity to protect the community, ensure fertility, and guard against harmful spiritual forces.
These ritual sculptures are typically housed in shrines belonging to initiation societies, most notably the Komo association. Access to them is restricted to initiated members, who perform ceremonies to activate and maintain their power. The surface of a well-used boli therefore records years—sometimes generations—of ritual practice, its layered texture serving as a material history of sacrificial acts and spiritual invocations.
During the twentieth century some boliw from the Koutiala region left their original ritual contexts and entered museum collections and private holdings. Outside their original environment they are often admired for their striking sculptural presence and dense, almost abstract forms. Yet their true significance lies in their role as ritual instruments—objects whose meaning derives from their function within Bamana religious life rather than from their visual appearance alone.
In this way, boliw from the Koutiala area exemplify a distinctive form of West African ritual art: objects that are not simply carved once and completed, but rather continually formed through repeated acts of offering and spiritual engagement, accumulating both physical substance and sacred power over time.
CAB38266
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