Nr. 102825696

Verkauft
Eine Holzfigur. - Shango - Yoruba - Nigeria  (Ohne mindestpreis)
Höchstgebot
€ 25
Vor 13 h

Eine Holzfigur. - Shango - Yoruba - Nigeria (Ohne mindestpreis)

A Yoruba shango sculpture collected in Kwara region, Nigeria, ending up in a human head with aluminium inlays in the eyes, fine, aged traces of use, incl. stand. Sculptures associated with Shango (Ṣàngó), the Yoruba deity of thunder and lightning, serve a dual function as ritual implements and symbolic representations of divine power and authority. Within the religious framework of Yoruba society, these sculptures embody and mediate the presence of the orisha during worship and public ceremonies. The most characteristic form is the Shango shrine figure (ere Shango), frequently depicting a standing female devotee holding a miniature altar or a bowl to receive offerings. The female aspect symbolizes fertility, nurture, and devotion, while the object she carries signifies the transmission of divine force (àṣẹ) between human and divine realms. At times, male figures also appear, often as priests or attendants. Another central sculptural type is the oshe Shango, a ritual dance wand carved with a double-axe motif (edun ara), the emblem of thunder. The double-axe represents both the destructive and regenerative aspects of Shango’s power. These wands are held by priestesses and devotees during possession dances, in which the deity is believed to manifest physically through rhythm and movement. The sculptures are kept in household or community shrines dedicated to Shango, where they function as the locus of offerings such as kola nuts, palm oil, and animal sacrifice. Beyond their ritual efficacy, the forms assert ideals of aesthetic refinement, moral strength, and social order, closely tied to the historical memory of Shango as a deified king of Oyo. Comparable traditions of Shango imagery and cult practice have been recorded in the Yoruba diaspora of the Caribbean and Brazil, where such figures retain their symbolic vocabulary while adapting to new religious contexts. References: Bascom, William. The Yoruba of Southwestern Nigeria. New York 1969. Drewal, Henry J., and John Pemberton III. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York 1989. Lawal, Babatunde. “Àṣẹ: Verbalizing and Visualizing Creative Power through Art.” Journal of Religion in Africa 24, 1994.

Nr. 102825696

Verkauft
Eine Holzfigur. - Shango - Yoruba - Nigeria  (Ohne mindestpreis)

Eine Holzfigur. - Shango - Yoruba - Nigeria (Ohne mindestpreis)

A Yoruba shango sculpture collected in Kwara region, Nigeria, ending up in a human head with aluminium inlays in the eyes, fine, aged traces of use, incl. stand.

Sculptures associated with Shango (Ṣàngó), the Yoruba deity of thunder and lightning, serve a dual function as ritual implements and symbolic representations of divine power and authority. Within the religious framework of Yoruba society, these sculptures embody and mediate the presence of the orisha during worship and public ceremonies.

The most characteristic form is the Shango shrine figure (ere Shango), frequently depicting a standing female devotee holding a miniature altar or a bowl to receive offerings. The female aspect symbolizes fertility, nurture, and devotion, while the object she carries signifies the transmission of divine force (àṣẹ) between human and divine realms. At times, male figures also appear, often as priests or attendants.

Another central sculptural type is the oshe Shango, a ritual dance wand carved with a double-axe motif (edun ara), the emblem of thunder. The double-axe represents both the destructive and regenerative aspects of Shango’s power. These wands are held by priestesses and devotees during possession dances, in which the deity is believed to manifest physically through rhythm and movement.

The sculptures are kept in household or community shrines dedicated to Shango, where they function as the locus of offerings such as kola nuts, palm oil, and animal sacrifice. Beyond their ritual efficacy, the forms assert ideals of aesthetic refinement, moral strength, and social order, closely tied to the historical memory of Shango as a deified king of Oyo.

Comparable traditions of Shango imagery and cult practice have been recorded in the Yoruba diaspora of the Caribbean and Brazil, where such figures retain their symbolic vocabulary while adapting to new religious contexts.

References:
Bascom, William. The Yoruba of Southwestern Nigeria. New York 1969.
Drewal, Henry J., and John Pemberton III. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York 1989.
Lawal, Babatunde. “Àṣẹ: Verbalizing and Visualizing Creative Power through Art.” Journal of Religion in Africa 24, 1994.

Höchstgebot
€ 25
Julien Gauthier
Experte
Schätzung  € 150 - € 200

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