Αρ. 104186646

Αντικείμενα που πωλήθηκαν
Ένα ξύλινο γλυπτό - venavi - Ewe - Τόγκο  (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)
Τελική προσφορά
€ 99
χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας
πριν 7 ώρες

Ένα ξύλινο γλυπτό - venavi - Ewe - Τόγκο (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)

An Ewe Venavi doll couple, South-West region, Togo. This pair of Ewe venavi figures originates from the southwestern region of Togo, within the wider cultural area of the Ewe-speaking populations that extend across southeastern Ghana, southern Togo, and parts of Benin. Venavi figures belong to a long-established tradition of twin commemoration and ritual care among Ewe communities, closely related in concept to Yoruba ibeji practices, though developed within distinct religious and aesthetic frameworks. When a twin dies, a carved substitute figure is commissioned to maintain balance between the living child, the deceased twin, and the spiritual forces believed to govern twinship. The paired nature of the present figures is central to their meaning. Twins in Ewe cosmology are regarded as beings of heightened spiritual sensitivity and power, and their relationship is considered inseparable even in cases of death. The venavi pair functions as a material continuation of this bond, allowing caregivers—often the mother—to maintain daily acts of attention and devotion directed toward both children. These figures are not passive memorials but active participants in domestic ritual life, receiving food offerings, washing, clothing, and adornment as if they were living children. The painted white shirts decorated with red dots introduce a layered visual vocabulary that combines symbolic coloration with textile reference. White in many West African ritual systems is associated with purity, spiritual mediation, ancestral presence, and liminal states between life and death. The red dotted pattern adds contrast and vitality, suggesting energy, protection, and life force. Together, the painted garments transform the carved bodies into culturally legible “dressed persons,” integrating sculpture with lived notions of clothing as identity and spiritual presentation. The bead ornaments around the neck and waist further reinforce the figures’ ritual and social significance. Beads in Ewe and broader West African contexts function as markers of status, protection, beauty, and spiritual power. Their placement at the neck and waist—both liminal bodily zones associated with vulnerability and transition—suggests an intention to secure and stabilize the figures spiritually. The multicolored arrangement of yellow, pink, and blue beads introduces a sense of vibrancy and care, reflecting ongoing acts of personalization and attention by the figures’ caretakers. Ewe venavi figures typically display a relatively standardized morphology: cylindrical bodies, simplified limbs, and an emphasis on upright symmetry. This formal economy directs attention away from naturalistic detail and toward the object’s role as a vessel for relationship and care. Over time, repeated handling, washing, and dressing produce surface wear and patination that further embed the figures within lived domestic practice. The paired configuration intensifies this effect, visually reinforcing notions of duality, complementarity, and enduring connection. Within Ewe society, twin-related practices are embedded in broader cosmological understandings of balance, destiny, and spiritual reciprocity. Venavi figures thus occupy an intermediate position between sculpture, ritual instrument, and family member. The present pair, with their painted garments and bead adornments, exemplifies the way in which aesthetic modification and ritual care converge to sustain the presence of the deceased twin within everyday life, ensuring continuity between the visible household and the invisible spiritual order. 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. Drucker-Brown, Susan. Mamprusi and the Ritual of Kingship in Northern Ghana. London: Oxford University Press, 1975. 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 Drewal, Henry John. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York: Center for African Art, 1989. Vogel, Susan Mullin. Africa Explores: 20th Century African Art. New York: Center for African Art, 1991.

Αρ. 104186646

Αντικείμενα που πωλήθηκαν
Ένα ξύλινο γλυπτό - venavi - Ewe - Τόγκο  (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)

Ένα ξύλινο γλυπτό - venavi - Ewe - Τόγκο (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)

An Ewe Venavi doll couple, South-West region, Togo.

This pair of Ewe venavi figures originates from the southwestern region of Togo, within the wider cultural area of the Ewe-speaking populations that extend across southeastern Ghana, southern Togo, and parts of Benin. Venavi figures belong to a long-established tradition of twin commemoration and ritual care among Ewe communities, closely related in concept to Yoruba ibeji practices, though developed within distinct religious and aesthetic frameworks. When a twin dies, a carved substitute figure is commissioned to maintain balance between the living child, the deceased twin, and the spiritual forces believed to govern twinship.

The paired nature of the present figures is central to their meaning. Twins in Ewe cosmology are regarded as beings of heightened spiritual sensitivity and power, and their relationship is considered inseparable even in cases of death. The venavi pair functions as a material continuation of this bond, allowing caregivers—often the mother—to maintain daily acts of attention and devotion directed toward both children. These figures are not passive memorials but active participants in domestic ritual life, receiving food offerings, washing, clothing, and adornment as if they were living children.

The painted white shirts decorated with red dots introduce a layered visual vocabulary that combines symbolic coloration with textile reference. White in many West African ritual systems is associated with purity, spiritual mediation, ancestral presence, and liminal states between life and death. The red dotted pattern adds contrast and vitality, suggesting energy, protection, and life force. Together, the painted garments transform the carved bodies into culturally legible “dressed persons,” integrating sculpture with lived notions of clothing as identity and spiritual presentation.

The bead ornaments around the neck and waist further reinforce the figures’ ritual and social significance. Beads in Ewe and broader West African contexts function as markers of status, protection, beauty, and spiritual power. Their placement at the neck and waist—both liminal bodily zones associated with vulnerability and transition—suggests an intention to secure and stabilize the figures spiritually. The multicolored arrangement of yellow, pink, and blue beads introduces a sense of vibrancy and care, reflecting ongoing acts of personalization and attention by the figures’ caretakers.

Ewe venavi figures typically display a relatively standardized morphology: cylindrical bodies, simplified limbs, and an emphasis on upright symmetry. This formal economy directs attention away from naturalistic detail and toward the object’s role as a vessel for relationship and care. Over time, repeated handling, washing, and dressing produce surface wear and patination that further embed the figures within lived domestic practice. The paired configuration intensifies this effect, visually reinforcing notions of duality, complementarity, and enduring connection.

Within Ewe society, twin-related practices are embedded in broader cosmological understandings of balance, destiny, and spiritual reciprocity. Venavi figures thus occupy an intermediate position between sculpture, ritual instrument, and family member. The present pair, with their painted garments and bead adornments, exemplifies the way in which aesthetic modification and ritual care converge to sustain the presence of the deceased twin within everyday life, ensuring continuity between the visible household and the invisible spiritual order.

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.

Drucker-Brown, Susan. Mamprusi and the Ritual of Kingship in Northern Ghana. London: Oxford University Press, 1975.

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

Vogel, Susan Mullin. Africa Explores: 20th Century African Art. New York: Center for African Art, 1991.

Τελική προσφορά
€ 99
χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας
Julien Gauthier
Ειδικός
Εκτιμήστε  € 150 - € 200

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