Nr. 83439869

Nicht mehr verfügbar
Senufo - Mali
Auktion beendet
Vor 1 Woche

Senufo - Mali

A female Senufo Rhythm pounder - called Débéle - Mali, Sikasso region,, uprising from a cylindrical, oval, base with straight, shortened legs, the openwork arms carved beside a slender body with a small pointed navel, the hips are covered with cowrie shells, wide shoulders, the columnar neck supporting a zoomorphic head with a protruding lower jaw, wearing a domed, single crested coiffure, scarification patterns at the body and around the navel; aged patina, the neck, the arms and the base of the statue with significant signs of a touch patina, the sculpture is still in the original condition like it was collected in situ. Normally these traces of use are washed off as soon as these objects arrive on the Western market. Lit.: A lecture of Dr. Junker, "der Originalzustand.. Wo ist er geblieben?" Gottschalk Burkhard, "Senufo, Massa und die Statuen des poro" 2002: 43; Glaze Anita J., "Art and Death in a Senufo Village", Indiana University Press, Bloomington 1981. A related eyemplare: Robert Goldwater, Senufo Sculpture from West Africa, New York, 1964, ills. 88 and 88a, Werner Gillon, Collecting African Art, London, 1979, p. 50, fig. 38 William Rubin, "Primitivism" in 20th Century Art: Affinity of the Tribal and the Modern, New York, 1984, vol. 1, p. 131 William Rubin, Le Primitivisme dans l’art du 20e siècle. Les artistes modernes devant l’art tribal, Paris, 1987, p. 131 Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat and Lucien Stéphan, L'art africain, Paris, 1988, p. 82, pl. 34, Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat, and Lucien Stéphan (eds.), Die Kunst des Schwarzen Afrika, Freiburg, 1989, p. 80, pl. 34 Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat and Lucien Stéphan, Art of Africa, New York, 1993, p. 82, pl. 34 Mary H. Nooter, Secrecy: African Art that Conceals and Reveals, New York, 1993, p. 155, cat. 79. According to Gottschalk, who tried to make a typolgy of the Senufo Déblé, these exemplares would probably be submitted to the group of the kulibèlè and not the fonombèlè. "While the former (fonombèlè), either because of a lack of ability for finer work (the fonombèlè are the blacksmiths in the Senufo society) or as a consciously used stylistic device, left the clear and powerful forms, the contrasting horizontals and verticals, largely as they were when they were defined of the proportions, the kulibèlè (the traditional carvers) tried to ensure that the body parts flowed smoothly into one another, as long as they did not incorporate the style of their older brothers into their work or more or less copy it." Source: Burkhard Gottschalk More realistic sounds the opinion of Glaze, who described the difficulties of a stylistic typology according to both ethnic groups after she did fieldwork around kufulo (region of Dikodougou). Anita J. Glaze, 81.

Nr. 83439869

Nicht mehr verfügbar
Senufo - Mali

Senufo - Mali

A female Senufo Rhythm pounder - called Débéle - Mali, Sikasso region,, uprising from a cylindrical, oval, base with straight, shortened legs, the openwork arms carved beside a slender body with a small pointed navel, the hips are covered with cowrie shells, wide shoulders, the columnar neck supporting a zoomorphic head with a protruding lower jaw, wearing a domed, single crested coiffure, scarification patterns at the body and around the navel; aged patina, the neck, the arms and the base of the statue with significant signs of a touch patina, the sculpture is still in the original condition like it was collected in situ. Normally these traces of use are washed off as soon as these objects arrive on the Western market.

Lit.: A lecture of Dr. Junker, "der Originalzustand.. Wo ist er geblieben?" Gottschalk Burkhard, "Senufo, Massa und die Statuen des poro" 2002: 43; Glaze Anita J., "Art and Death in a Senufo Village", Indiana University Press, Bloomington 1981. A related eyemplare: Robert Goldwater, Senufo Sculpture from West Africa, New York, 1964, ills. 88 and 88a, Werner Gillon, Collecting African Art, London, 1979, p. 50, fig. 38 William Rubin, "Primitivism" in 20th Century Art: Affinity of the Tribal and the Modern, New York, 1984, vol. 1, p. 131 William Rubin, Le Primitivisme dans l’art du 20e siècle. Les artistes modernes devant l’art tribal, Paris, 1987, p. 131 Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat and Lucien Stéphan, L'art africain, Paris, 1988, p. 82, pl. 34, Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat, and Lucien Stéphan (eds.), Die Kunst des Schwarzen Afrika, Freiburg, 1989, p. 80, pl. 34 Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat and Lucien Stéphan, Art of Africa, New York, 1993, p. 82, pl. 34 Mary H. Nooter, Secrecy: African Art that Conceals and Reveals, New York, 1993, p. 155, cat. 79.
According to Gottschalk, who tried to make a typolgy of the Senufo Déblé, these exemplares would probably be submitted to the group of the kulibèlè and not the fonombèlè.
"While the former (fonombèlè), either because of a lack of ability for finer work (the fonombèlè are the blacksmiths in the Senufo society) or as a consciously used stylistic device, left the clear and powerful forms, the contrasting horizontals and verticals, largely as they were when they were defined of the proportions, the kulibèlè (the traditional carvers) tried to ensure that the body parts flowed smoothly into one another, as long as they did not incorporate the style of their older brothers into their work or more or less copy it." Source: Burkhard Gottschalk

More realistic sounds the opinion of Glaze, who described the difficulties of a stylistic typology according to both ethnic groups after she did fieldwork around kufulo (region of Dikodougou). Anita J. Glaze, 81.

Suchalarm einrichten
Richten Sie einen Suchalarm ein, um benachrichtigt zu werden, sobald neue passende Objekte verfügbar sind.

Dieses Objekt wurde vorgestellt in:

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

So kaufen Sie auf Catawiki

Mehr zum Käuferschutz erfahren

      1. Etwas Besonderes entdecken

      Entdecken Sie in unseren Auktionen Tausende von besonderen Objekten, die von Experten ausgewählt wurden. Sehen Sie sich die Fotos, die ausführliche Beschreibung und den Schätzwert der besonderen Objekte an, die Sie interessieren. 

      2. Höchstgebot abgeben

      Finden Sie etwas, das Sie begeistert, und geben Sie das Höchstgebot ab. Sie können die Auktion bis zum Schluss mitverfolgen oder unser System für Sie bieten lassen. Dazu müssen Sie einfach nur den Maximalbetrag eingeben, den Sie für das jeweilige Objekt ausgeben möchten. 

      3. Sichere Zahlung durchführen

      Bezahlen Sie Ihr besonderes Objekt und wir verwahren Ihre Zahlung, bis Ihr Objekt unversehrt bei Ihnen angekommen ist. Wir wickeln alle Transaktionen mit einem zuverlässigen und sicheren Zahlungssystem ab. 

Haben Sie etwas Ähnliches zu verkaufen?

Unabhängig davon, ob Online-Auktionen Neuland für Sie sind oder ob Sie gewerblich verkaufen – wir helfen Ihnen, mehr mit Ihren besonderen Objekten zu verdienen.

Objekt verkaufen