Forowa - Ashanti/Djenné - Mali/Ghana

03
days
07
hours
51
minutes
20
seconds
Current bid
€ 15
Reserve price not met
Julien Gauthier
Expert
Selected by Julien Gauthier

With almost a decade of experience bridging science, museum curation, and traditional blacksmithing, Julien has developed a unique expertise in historical arms, armour, and African art.

Estimate  € 150 - € 200
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Three West African antiquities from a private collection: a late‑19th‑century Ashanti/Djenné bronze Forowa container from Ghana (10 × 17 cm, green patina) and two Djenné pottery grave markers from central Mali of the medieval Djenné culture.

AI-assisted summary

Description from the seller

Three antique objects from West-Africa.
First the bronze container: , made of thin bronze sheets and designed into a cylindrical bronze box with a round domed lid. This box is beautifully decorated with floral and animal motifs, incised into the thin bronze sheet.
The surface has a green patina; due to its old age; also some corrosion has occurred on the lid. Mostly these boxes ,or "Forowa`s", as they are called in Ghana, were buried underground or placed near family altars. Made in the late 19th cent. Dim. 10 x 17 cm. For more information on these rare boxes see the book; "Bronzes et autres alliages", by Andre Blandin. page; 170-171.
The two other objects ,made of pottery, are from the Djenné region of central Mali and belong to the Medieval Djenó culture. They are used as gravemarkers and are buried as a totemic object alongside the deceased. The serpents on the markers have a protective quality, guarding the deceased from evil spirits. Sometimes these items are found in times of flooding, when old settlements are exposed. Possibly pre 19th.
All items were collected in situ in the 1990`s. From a private Dutch collection.

Three antique objects from West-Africa.
First the bronze container: , made of thin bronze sheets and designed into a cylindrical bronze box with a round domed lid. This box is beautifully decorated with floral and animal motifs, incised into the thin bronze sheet.
The surface has a green patina; due to its old age; also some corrosion has occurred on the lid. Mostly these boxes ,or "Forowa`s", as they are called in Ghana, were buried underground or placed near family altars. Made in the late 19th cent. Dim. 10 x 17 cm. For more information on these rare boxes see the book; "Bronzes et autres alliages", by Andre Blandin. page; 170-171.
The two other objects ,made of pottery, are from the Djenné region of central Mali and belong to the Medieval Djenó culture. They are used as gravemarkers and are buried as a totemic object alongside the deceased. The serpents on the markers have a protective quality, guarding the deceased from evil spirits. Sometimes these items are found in times of flooding, when old settlements are exposed. Possibly pre 19th.
All items were collected in situ in the 1990`s. From a private Dutch collection.

Details

Indigenous object name
Forowa
No. of items
3
Ethnic group/ culture
Ashanti/Djenné
Country of Origin
Mali/Ghana
Material
Bronze/pottery
Sold with stand
No
Condition
Fair condition
Provenance
Private collection
The NetherlandsVerified
878
Objects sold
100%
Private

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