Eine Holzskulptur - Chamba - Nigeria (Ohne mindestpreis)






Zehn Jahre Erfahrung auf dem Gebiet historischer Waffen und Rüstungen sowie afrikanischer Kunst.
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EineHolzskulptur mit dem Titel 'A wooden sculpture' aus Nigeria von den Chamba, Höhe 77 cm, Gewicht 2,5 kg, in fairen Zustand und mit Stand verkauft.
Vom Verkäufer bereitgestellte Beschreibung
One of the most striking characteristics of many Chamba sculptures from the Benue region of Nigeria is the peculiar treatment of the arms. Whereas in numerous African sculptural traditions the arms primarily serve to convey action, status, or social relationships, among the Chamba they often seem to fulfill a different function. They become autonomous formal elements that detach themselves from the anatomical body and generate their own structural order. The sharply bent arms frequently appear almost redundant: they repeat a movement already present in the body rather than adding new information. Incl stand.
Yet it is precisely this redundancy that constitutes a significant part of their aesthetic power. The torso forms a central vertical axis, while the arms create additional vertical and diagonal lines at the sides. The legs continue this movement downward, often following a related but stylistically distinct principle. The result is less a representation of a human body than a rhythmically organized arrangement of parallel and offset forms. The sculptor appears less concerned with anatomy than with structure. The figure becomes a plastic construction whose individual elements are not organized according to naturalistic criteria but according to principles of repetition, symmetry, and the dynamic tension between arms and legs.
This tendency toward structural condensation gives many Chamba figures a surprisingly modern appearance. Particularly striking is their affinity with certain works by Constantin Brâncuși. Such a comparison should not be understood as evidence of a historical connection but rather as an observation of formal kinship. As in Brâncuși’s work, the human figure is reduced to elemental forms. The arms no longer function as limbs but as geometric modules within a larger system. The body appears as a column flanked by additional column-like elements. The sculpture derives its impact not from mimetic precision but from the clarity of its internal order.
Especially illuminating in this regard is a comparison with Brâncuși’s wooden sculptures and his celebrated Endless Column (last photo sequence). There, form emerges through the serial repetition of a simple module. Something similar can be observed in many Chamba figures. The bent arms appear as repetitions or variations of a fundamental movement already embedded within the body itself. The impression of an architectural construction comes to the fore, overshadowing the notion of an individual human being.
This observation points to a broader problem in the Western reception of African art. For a long time, such figures were viewed primarily as ethnographic documents. Only with the artists and collectors of modernism did it become apparent that many of these works are organized according to genuinely sculptural principles. This particular Chamba sculpture demonstrates with exceptional clarity that the reduction of the body to a system of elementary forms was by no means an invention of the European avant-garde. Rather, it reveals an independent sculptural logic that developed outside and independently of Western art theory.
The seemingly superfluous arms make this especially visible. Their function is not to describe the body but to generate a visual rhythm. They create intervals of space, guide the eye across the surface, and stabilize the overall composition. What initially appears to be an anatomical oddity reveals itself, upon closer examination, as a central organizational principle of the sculpture. The figure is conceived not as a body but as an architecture.
In this sense, many Chamba sculptures possess a remarkable contemporaneity. They demonstrate that abstraction is not necessarily the result of historical progress but can emerge as an independent mode of sculptural thinking within very different cultural contexts. The repeated angularity of the arms, as well as the zigzag configuration of the legs, is therefore not merely the expression of a stylistic convention. Rather, it forms part of a formal strategy that transforms the human body into a system of lines, volumes, and rhythms. It is precisely here that the distinctive power of these sculptures resides, and it is also the reason why they continue to leave such a lasting impression today.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
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One of the most striking characteristics of many Chamba sculptures from the Benue region of Nigeria is the peculiar treatment of the arms. Whereas in numerous African sculptural traditions the arms primarily serve to convey action, status, or social relationships, among the Chamba they often seem to fulfill a different function. They become autonomous formal elements that detach themselves from the anatomical body and generate their own structural order. The sharply bent arms frequently appear almost redundant: they repeat a movement already present in the body rather than adding new information. Incl stand.
Yet it is precisely this redundancy that constitutes a significant part of their aesthetic power. The torso forms a central vertical axis, while the arms create additional vertical and diagonal lines at the sides. The legs continue this movement downward, often following a related but stylistically distinct principle. The result is less a representation of a human body than a rhythmically organized arrangement of parallel and offset forms. The sculptor appears less concerned with anatomy than with structure. The figure becomes a plastic construction whose individual elements are not organized according to naturalistic criteria but according to principles of repetition, symmetry, and the dynamic tension between arms and legs.
This tendency toward structural condensation gives many Chamba figures a surprisingly modern appearance. Particularly striking is their affinity with certain works by Constantin Brâncuși. Such a comparison should not be understood as evidence of a historical connection but rather as an observation of formal kinship. As in Brâncuși’s work, the human figure is reduced to elemental forms. The arms no longer function as limbs but as geometric modules within a larger system. The body appears as a column flanked by additional column-like elements. The sculpture derives its impact not from mimetic precision but from the clarity of its internal order.
Especially illuminating in this regard is a comparison with Brâncuși’s wooden sculptures and his celebrated Endless Column (last photo sequence). There, form emerges through the serial repetition of a simple module. Something similar can be observed in many Chamba figures. The bent arms appear as repetitions or variations of a fundamental movement already embedded within the body itself. The impression of an architectural construction comes to the fore, overshadowing the notion of an individual human being.
This observation points to a broader problem in the Western reception of African art. For a long time, such figures were viewed primarily as ethnographic documents. Only with the artists and collectors of modernism did it become apparent that many of these works are organized according to genuinely sculptural principles. This particular Chamba sculpture demonstrates with exceptional clarity that the reduction of the body to a system of elementary forms was by no means an invention of the European avant-garde. Rather, it reveals an independent sculptural logic that developed outside and independently of Western art theory.
The seemingly superfluous arms make this especially visible. Their function is not to describe the body but to generate a visual rhythm. They create intervals of space, guide the eye across the surface, and stabilize the overall composition. What initially appears to be an anatomical oddity reveals itself, upon closer examination, as a central organizational principle of the sculpture. The figure is conceived not as a body but as an architecture.
In this sense, many Chamba sculptures possess a remarkable contemporaneity. They demonstrate that abstraction is not necessarily the result of historical progress but can emerge as an independent mode of sculptural thinking within very different cultural contexts. The repeated angularity of the arms, as well as the zigzag configuration of the legs, is therefore not merely the expression of a stylistic convention. Rather, it forms part of a formal strategy that transforms the human body into a system of lines, volumes, and rhythms. It is precisely here that the distinctive power of these sculptures resides, and it is also the reason why they continue to leave such a lasting impression today.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Der Verkäufer stellt sich vor
Details
Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers
- Unternehmen:
- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
- Repräsentant:
- Wolfgang Jaenicke
- Adresse:
- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
GERMANY - Telefonnummer:
- +493033951033
- Email:
- w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
- USt-IdNr.:
- DE241193499
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