Nr. 104187918

Verkauft
Eine Holzskulptur - Aklama - Ghana  (Ohne mindestpreis)
Höchstgebot
€ 130
Ohne mindestpreis
Vor 18 h

Eine Holzskulptur - Aklama - Ghana (Ohne mindestpreis)

An Aklama statue couple, South-East Region, Ghana. This paired figure belongs to the Aklama sculptural tradition of southeastern Ghana, a region culturally shaped by Ewe-speaking communities and their broader ritual systems extending into southern Togo and Benin. Aklama figures function within a protective and mediatory sphere of practice concerned with personal well-being, spiritual balance, and the containment or redirection of unseen forces believed to affect health, fortune, and social stability. Unlike commemorative ancestral sculpture, Aklama objects are primarily operational: they are activated through ritual action, maintained through care, and understood as living intermediaries within household and shrine contexts. The present couple is notable for its chromatic articulation, with bodies painted white and heads rendered in blue. This color differentiation is not merely decorative but participates in a structured visual language widely attested in southeastern Ghanaian religious practice. White is commonly associated with purity, spiritual openness, and the presence of benevolent or neutralized forces. It often marks states of ritual readiness or containment, particularly in objects intended to mediate between human and spiritual domains. Blue, by contrast, carries associations with depth, coolness, spiritual potency, and in some contexts protection or calming force. The concentration of blue on the head—the seat of perception, identity, and destiny in many West African cosmologies—suggests an emphasis on cognitive or spiritual safeguarding, reinforcing the figure’s role as a protective agent. The paired configuration intensifies these meanings through the logic of duplication and balance. Dual figures in West African sculpture frequently articulate concepts of symmetry, reinforcement, and relational stability, whether in twin commemoration, protective doubling, or the mirroring of spiritual forces. In this case, the male–female or paired human form may be understood less as individualized portraiture and more as a structural expression of complementarity, ensuring equilibrium within the forces the figures are intended to manage. Formally, Aklama figures tend toward simplified verticality, with compact torsos, schematic limbs, and a frontal, stabilized stance. This economy of form reflects their primary function as vessels for ritual efficacy rather than mimetic representation. Their surfaces, often repeatedly handled, washed, or anointed, accumulate layered patinas that index long-term use within domestic or shrine settings. The painted surfaces of the present pair indicate ongoing maintenance and renewal, suggesting that color is periodically refreshed as part of their continued activation. In southeastern Ghanaian religious environments, objects of this type are often embedded within broader networks of Ewe ritual practice, including healing traditions, protective shrines, and household devotional systems. Their meaning is not fixed but emerges through interaction with ritual specialists, owners, and the spiritual entities they are believed to engage. The Aklama couple thus operates as both material object and active participant in a relational field of protection, care, and equilibrium, where visual form and ritual action are inseparable. References Blier, Suzanne Preston. African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995. Cole, Herbert M., and Doran H. Ross. The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1977. Herreman, Frank, ed. Ewe Art and Culture. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, 2003. Meyerowitz, Eva L. R. The Sacred State of the Akan. London: Faber & Faber, 1951. Pemberton, John III, and Henry John Drewal. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York: Center for African Art, 1989. This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description. Height: 22 cm / 22 cm Weight: 80 g / 80 g (incl. stand)

Nr. 104187918

Verkauft
Eine Holzskulptur - Aklama - Ghana  (Ohne mindestpreis)

Eine Holzskulptur - Aklama - Ghana (Ohne mindestpreis)

An Aklama statue couple, South-East Region, Ghana.

This paired figure belongs to the Aklama sculptural tradition of southeastern Ghana, a region culturally shaped by Ewe-speaking communities and their broader ritual systems extending into southern Togo and Benin. Aklama figures function within a protective and mediatory sphere of practice concerned with personal well-being, spiritual balance, and the containment or redirection of unseen forces believed to affect health, fortune, and social stability. Unlike commemorative ancestral sculpture, Aklama objects are primarily operational: they are activated through ritual action, maintained through care, and understood as living intermediaries within household and shrine contexts.

The present couple is notable for its chromatic articulation, with bodies painted white and heads rendered in blue. This color differentiation is not merely decorative but participates in a structured visual language widely attested in southeastern Ghanaian religious practice. White is commonly associated with purity, spiritual openness, and the presence of benevolent or neutralized forces. It often marks states of ritual readiness or containment, particularly in objects intended to mediate between human and spiritual domains. Blue, by contrast, carries associations with depth, coolness, spiritual potency, and in some contexts protection or calming force. The concentration of blue on the head—the seat of perception, identity, and destiny in many West African cosmologies—suggests an emphasis on cognitive or spiritual safeguarding, reinforcing the figure’s role as a protective agent.

The paired configuration intensifies these meanings through the logic of duplication and balance. Dual figures in West African sculpture frequently articulate concepts of symmetry, reinforcement, and relational stability, whether in twin commemoration, protective doubling, or the mirroring of spiritual forces. In this case, the male–female or paired human form may be understood less as individualized portraiture and more as a structural expression of complementarity, ensuring equilibrium within the forces the figures are intended to manage.

Formally, Aklama figures tend toward simplified verticality, with compact torsos, schematic limbs, and a frontal, stabilized stance. This economy of form reflects their primary function as vessels for ritual efficacy rather than mimetic representation. Their surfaces, often repeatedly handled, washed, or anointed, accumulate layered patinas that index long-term use within domestic or shrine settings. The painted surfaces of the present pair indicate ongoing maintenance and renewal, suggesting that color is periodically refreshed as part of their continued activation.

In southeastern Ghanaian religious environments, objects of this type are often embedded within broader networks of Ewe ritual practice, including healing traditions, protective shrines, and household devotional systems. Their meaning is not fixed but emerges through interaction with ritual specialists, owners, and the spiritual entities they are believed to engage. The Aklama couple thus operates as both material object and active participant in a relational field of protection, care, and equilibrium, where visual form and ritual action are inseparable.

References


Blier, Suzanne Preston. African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

Cole, Herbert M., and Doran H. Ross. The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1977.

Herreman, Frank, ed. Ewe Art and Culture. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, 2003.

Meyerowitz, Eva L. R. The Sacred State of the Akan. London: Faber & Faber, 1951.

Pemberton, John III, and Henry John Drewal. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York: Center for African Art, 1989.

This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description.

Height: 22 cm / 22 cm
Weight: 80 g / 80 g (incl. stand)

Höchstgebot
€ 130
Ohne mindestpreis
Julien Gauthier
Experte
Schätzung  € 150 - € 200

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