Ένα ξύλινο γλυπτό - Aklama - Γκάνα (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)






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Ξύλινο γλυπτό με τίτλο 'A wooden sculpture' από το Γκάνα, συνδεδεμένο με τον πολιτισμό Aklama στην περιοχή που μιλούν οι Εβέ, διατίθεται με βάση, ύψος 25 εκ, βάρος 100 g, σε καλή κατάσταση.
Περιγραφή από τον πωλητή
An Aklama sculpture from the Ewe-speaking cultural area of southern Ghana and Togo belongs to a class of small-scale ritual objects commonly associated with spirit mediation, protection, and personal destiny work. In many documented shrine contexts, these figures are understood as helper spirits (Aklama kpakpewo) that function as intermediaries between individuals and wider spiritual forces. They are frequently kept in private or semi-private altars and may accompany other ritual media within complex shrine assemblages. Incl stand.
A visually distinctive variant of Aklama sculptures is characterized by a white kaolin (chalk) surface treatment, often combined with applied pigments in red, blue, black, or multicoloured accents. The white coating is not merely aesthetic: ethnographic documentation from Ewe ritual contexts indicates that white is closely associated with spiritual clarity, cooling forces, and the activation or identification of certain protective spirits. In some shrine descriptions, Aklama figures are explicitly linked to white coverings, powders, and ritual substances placed on or around the sculpture, reinforcing their role as mediators of benevolent forces.
The addition of coloured pigment spots or layered repainting is frequently interpreted in museum and field documentation as evidence of ongoing ritual use, where surfaces are periodically renewed or recharged. Rather than representing fixed iconography, these markings often accumulate over time, reflecting changing devotional needs, household protection practices, or healing and fortune-seeking contexts. This dynamic surface treatment distinguishes Aklama objects from purely aesthetic sculpture traditions and situates them within lived ritual environments.
Within broader West African art-historical discourse, Aklama figures are often discussed alongside other “personal shrine objects” that serve highly individualized spiritual functions. They are typically small (often hand-sized), carved in wood, and vary widely in form—from abstracted anthropomorphic bodies to highly simplified zoomorphic shapes—emphasizing function over naturalistic representation.
In the scholarship associated with the Jaenicke-Njoya archival documentation (MAZ / study references) and comparable study collections of West African ritual sculpture (including the Horst Antes study corpus), Aklama objects are consistently framed as context-dependent ritual instruments rather than static artworks, with their white kaolin surfaces and pigment traces understood as indicators of ritual biography rather than fixed design.
Reference list (selection
Jaenicke-Njoya Archive study references, Aklama documentation corpus, collection-based field notes and comparative photographic archive, unpublished study materials cited in dealer and research catalogues
Quarcoopome, Nii O. (2016). Aklama: Helper Spirits of the Ewe and Dangme from the Study Collection of Horst Antes. Studienstiftung Horst Antes, Karlsruhe.
University of Ghana (2020/2023). Ethnographic thesis materials on Aklama shrine practices and spirit mediation in Ewe religious contexts. UGSpace Repository.
“Aklama Accueil / Documentation site.” aklama.net (accessed ethnographic overview of Ewe/Dangme ritual objects and Aklama classifications).
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Ιστορία πωλητή
An Aklama sculpture from the Ewe-speaking cultural area of southern Ghana and Togo belongs to a class of small-scale ritual objects commonly associated with spirit mediation, protection, and personal destiny work. In many documented shrine contexts, these figures are understood as helper spirits (Aklama kpakpewo) that function as intermediaries between individuals and wider spiritual forces. They are frequently kept in private or semi-private altars and may accompany other ritual media within complex shrine assemblages. Incl stand.
A visually distinctive variant of Aklama sculptures is characterized by a white kaolin (chalk) surface treatment, often combined with applied pigments in red, blue, black, or multicoloured accents. The white coating is not merely aesthetic: ethnographic documentation from Ewe ritual contexts indicates that white is closely associated with spiritual clarity, cooling forces, and the activation or identification of certain protective spirits. In some shrine descriptions, Aklama figures are explicitly linked to white coverings, powders, and ritual substances placed on or around the sculpture, reinforcing their role as mediators of benevolent forces.
The addition of coloured pigment spots or layered repainting is frequently interpreted in museum and field documentation as evidence of ongoing ritual use, where surfaces are periodically renewed or recharged. Rather than representing fixed iconography, these markings often accumulate over time, reflecting changing devotional needs, household protection practices, or healing and fortune-seeking contexts. This dynamic surface treatment distinguishes Aklama objects from purely aesthetic sculpture traditions and situates them within lived ritual environments.
Within broader West African art-historical discourse, Aklama figures are often discussed alongside other “personal shrine objects” that serve highly individualized spiritual functions. They are typically small (often hand-sized), carved in wood, and vary widely in form—from abstracted anthropomorphic bodies to highly simplified zoomorphic shapes—emphasizing function over naturalistic representation.
In the scholarship associated with the Jaenicke-Njoya archival documentation (MAZ / study references) and comparable study collections of West African ritual sculpture (including the Horst Antes study corpus), Aklama objects are consistently framed as context-dependent ritual instruments rather than static artworks, with their white kaolin surfaces and pigment traces understood as indicators of ritual biography rather than fixed design.
Reference list (selection
Jaenicke-Njoya Archive study references, Aklama documentation corpus, collection-based field notes and comparative photographic archive, unpublished study materials cited in dealer and research catalogues
Quarcoopome, Nii O. (2016). Aklama: Helper Spirits of the Ewe and Dangme from the Study Collection of Horst Antes. Studienstiftung Horst Antes, Karlsruhe.
University of Ghana (2020/2023). Ethnographic thesis materials on Aklama shrine practices and spirit mediation in Ewe religious contexts. UGSpace Repository.
“Aklama Accueil / Documentation site.” aklama.net (accessed ethnographic overview of Ewe/Dangme ritual objects and Aklama classifications).
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Ιστορία πωλητή
Λεπτομέρειες
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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