Eine Holzskulptur - Voodoo - Fon - Togo (Ohne mindestpreis)






Zehn Jahre Erfahrung auf dem Gebiet historischer Waffen und Rüstungen sowie afrikanischer Kunst.
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Eine Holzskulptur aus Togo von den Fon im Voodoo-Traditionskreis, ein schiffsförmiges Schreinobjekt der Fon/Voodoo-Kultur.
Vom Verkäufer bereitgestellte Beschreibung
A Fon/Voodoo sculpture in the shape of a ship from Benin or Togo represents a remarkable example of the ability of Vodun visual culture to absorb, reinterpret, and ritualize external influences. While ships were not indigenous forms within precolonial West African sculptural traditions, they became highly significant symbols following centuries of contact with European traders, missionaries, colonial administrations, and maritime commerce along the Gulf of Guinea. Within the Fon cultural sphere, foreign objects were often incorporated into the symbolic vocabulary of Vodun, where they acquired meanings that extended far beyond their original practical functions.
A ship-shaped shrine object or ritual sculpture may evoke concepts of travel, wealth, commerce, spiritual passage, and communication between visible and invisible worlds. In Vodun cosmology, water constitutes a powerful liminal realm inhabited by numerous spirits and deities. Maritime imagery can therefore symbolize journeys between earthly existence and the domain of the ancestors or spirits. Such sculptures may also allude to historical memories of coastal trade, migration, and the profound transformations that accompanied the Atlantic era.
The application of brightly coloured pigments further enhances the ritual potency of the object. In Fon religious practice, colours possess symbolic and spiritual significance. White pigments, often derived from kaolin, are associated with purity, ancestral forces, and the spirit world. Red may signify vitality, power, sacrifice, or protection, while blue and green are frequently linked to water spirits and prosperity. The accumulation of multiple colours on a single sculpture suggests repeated ritual activation, offerings, and ceremonial use over an extended period.
Ship-shaped Vodun sculptures are often best understood not as literal representations of vessels but as symbolic constructions embodying movement, exchange, protection, and spiritual transition. Their forms reveal the dynamic and adaptive nature of Fon religious art, in which local cosmological concepts continuously engage with historical experiences and external cultural influences. Through ritual use, such objects become active participants in ceremonies intended to invoke divine assistance, ensure prosperity, protect communities, or establish communication with spiritual entities.
The vivid polychromy of these sculptures contributes not only to their visual impact but also to their efficacy within ritual contexts. Colours, sacrificial substances, libations, and accumulated offerings transform the object into a living repository of spiritual force, reflecting the central Vodun concept that power is generated through ongoing interaction between humans, materials, ancestors, and deities.
Reference List
Blier, Suzanne Preston. African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Blier, Suzanne Preston. The Anatomy of Architecture: Ontology and Metaphor in Batammaliba Architectural Expression. Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Herskovits, Melville J. Dahomey: An Ancient West African Kingdom. Northwestern University Press, 1967.
Mercier, Paul. Tradition, Changement, Histoire: Les Somba du Dahomey Septentrional. Anthropos, 1968.
Argyriadis, Kali, and Stefania Capone (eds.). Rediscovering Vodou in Benin and Togo. Brill, 2011.
Maupoil, Bernard. La Géomancie à l'Ancienne Côte des Esclaves. Institut d'Ethnologie, Paris, 1943.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Der Verkäufer stellt sich vor
A Fon/Voodoo sculpture in the shape of a ship from Benin or Togo represents a remarkable example of the ability of Vodun visual culture to absorb, reinterpret, and ritualize external influences. While ships were not indigenous forms within precolonial West African sculptural traditions, they became highly significant symbols following centuries of contact with European traders, missionaries, colonial administrations, and maritime commerce along the Gulf of Guinea. Within the Fon cultural sphere, foreign objects were often incorporated into the symbolic vocabulary of Vodun, where they acquired meanings that extended far beyond their original practical functions.
A ship-shaped shrine object or ritual sculpture may evoke concepts of travel, wealth, commerce, spiritual passage, and communication between visible and invisible worlds. In Vodun cosmology, water constitutes a powerful liminal realm inhabited by numerous spirits and deities. Maritime imagery can therefore symbolize journeys between earthly existence and the domain of the ancestors or spirits. Such sculptures may also allude to historical memories of coastal trade, migration, and the profound transformations that accompanied the Atlantic era.
The application of brightly coloured pigments further enhances the ritual potency of the object. In Fon religious practice, colours possess symbolic and spiritual significance. White pigments, often derived from kaolin, are associated with purity, ancestral forces, and the spirit world. Red may signify vitality, power, sacrifice, or protection, while blue and green are frequently linked to water spirits and prosperity. The accumulation of multiple colours on a single sculpture suggests repeated ritual activation, offerings, and ceremonial use over an extended period.
Ship-shaped Vodun sculptures are often best understood not as literal representations of vessels but as symbolic constructions embodying movement, exchange, protection, and spiritual transition. Their forms reveal the dynamic and adaptive nature of Fon religious art, in which local cosmological concepts continuously engage with historical experiences and external cultural influences. Through ritual use, such objects become active participants in ceremonies intended to invoke divine assistance, ensure prosperity, protect communities, or establish communication with spiritual entities.
The vivid polychromy of these sculptures contributes not only to their visual impact but also to their efficacy within ritual contexts. Colours, sacrificial substances, libations, and accumulated offerings transform the object into a living repository of spiritual force, reflecting the central Vodun concept that power is generated through ongoing interaction between humans, materials, ancestors, and deities.
Reference List
Blier, Suzanne Preston. African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Blier, Suzanne Preston. The Anatomy of Architecture: Ontology and Metaphor in Batammaliba Architectural Expression. Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Herskovits, Melville J. Dahomey: An Ancient West African Kingdom. Northwestern University Press, 1967.
Mercier, Paul. Tradition, Changement, Histoire: Les Somba du Dahomey Septentrional. Anthropos, 1968.
Argyriadis, Kali, and Stefania Capone (eds.). Rediscovering Vodou in Benin and Togo. Brill, 2011.
Maupoil, Bernard. La Géomancie à l'Ancienne Côte des Esclaves. Institut d'Ethnologie, Paris, 1943.
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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