Bankoni terracota head - Figure - Mali

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Julien Gauthier
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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  € 380 - € 450
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Terracotta head of the Bankoni culture from Mali, an archaeological funerary sculpture dating to roughly 1550–1600, measuring 10 cm high, 6 cm wide and 10 cm deep, provenance Majestic Gallery, Paris, with an acceptable, heavily used condition and possible minor missing parts.

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Description from the seller

Terracotta Funerary Head. Bankoni Culture
Archaeological object, probably with a funerary function. The first sculptures of the Bankoni style were studied in the 1940s (by Théodore Monod among others) in Bankoni south of Bamako. From 1974, this art was studied, and excavations allowed their dating, between the 13th and 15th centuries. (Period of the Mandingo Empire). The style named in reference to the eponymous archaeological site includes several localities in the immediate periphery (Dioila, Mbela....), and further north of the Niger River. They are sometimes confused with the terracotta of the Bura civilization. They correspond to a prosperous economic period linked to trans-Saharan trade, a hinge between the nomadic world and the sedentary world. The caravans that crossed the desert to Timbuktu, exchanged slaves and gold for salt. These transit cities then experienced significant development. Found mainly in domestic contexts, these statuettes may be representatives of divinities, ancestors, used in the context of the foundation of a house or domestic cults.

Provenance: Majestic Gallery, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

Terracotta Funerary Head. Bankoni Culture
Archaeological object, probably with a funerary function. The first sculptures of the Bankoni style were studied in the 1940s (by Théodore Monod among others) in Bankoni south of Bamako. From 1974, this art was studied, and excavations allowed their dating, between the 13th and 15th centuries. (Period of the Mandingo Empire). The style named in reference to the eponymous archaeological site includes several localities in the immediate periphery (Dioila, Mbela....), and further north of the Niger River. They are sometimes confused with the terracotta of the Bura civilization. They correspond to a prosperous economic period linked to trans-Saharan trade, a hinge between the nomadic world and the sedentary world. The caravans that crossed the desert to Timbuktu, exchanged slaves and gold for salt. These transit cities then experienced significant development. Found mainly in domestic contexts, these statuettes may be representatives of divinities, ancestors, used in the context of the foundation of a house or domestic cults.

Provenance: Majestic Gallery, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

Details

Era
1400-1900
No. of items
1
Title
Bankoni terracota head
Country of Origin
Mali
Material
Terracotta
Condition
Fair condition - heavily used & with possibly minor parts missing
Height
10 cm
Width
6 cm
Depth
10 cm
Estimated period
1550-1600
SpainVerified
260
Objects sold
100%
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