Luena - DR Congo

04
days
17
hours
16
minutes
22
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Current bid
€ 60
Reserve price not met
Dimitri André
Expert
Selected by Dimitri André

Holds a postgraduate degree in African studies and 15 years experience in African art.

Estimate  € 350 - € 400
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FRBidder 2035
€60
FRBidder 2035
€1

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Pwevo mask of the Luena people from the Democratic Republic of Congo, mid-20th century, carved in wood, 32 cm high, in good condition, provenance: private collection.

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Description from the seller

This Pwevo mask, equivalent to the Pwo mask of the Tshokwe, represents a female ancestor. The
hairstyle, consisting of long, fine braids of plant fibres dyed blue at the front and parted down the middle in accordance with the fashion of the time, is an innovation of the 1930s. The face, with greater depth than among the Tshokwe, is painted red and, at the junction with the hair, has a double strip of coloured glass beads as a coquettish touch; below and along its entire length are scarifications in the form of vertical notches; it has a medial line along the entire length of the forehead and nose; in the eye sockets, the upper part of which is painted black, it has globular eyes slit horizontally; the mouth, schematic, small and elongated, is slightly open, without showing the teeth, with two vertical tattoos below, between the mouth and the rounded chin; the circular and double-arched tattoos on the cheeks are common and distinctive among Luena women; the ears are also schematic, semicircular in shape, with linear tattoos in
their centre. The mask has a collar made of braided fibres in a mesh pattern, which conceals the wearer's face
while allowing them to see. In Angola, the dance is sober and elegant, but in Zambia, the dancer moves along a rope stretched between two posts about ten metres above the ground.

Provenance: Berthe Hartert collection
Argiles Collection, Barcelona

This Pwevo mask, equivalent to the Pwo mask of the Tshokwe, represents a female ancestor. The
hairstyle, consisting of long, fine braids of plant fibres dyed blue at the front and parted down the middle in accordance with the fashion of the time, is an innovation of the 1930s. The face, with greater depth than among the Tshokwe, is painted red and, at the junction with the hair, has a double strip of coloured glass beads as a coquettish touch; below and along its entire length are scarifications in the form of vertical notches; it has a medial line along the entire length of the forehead and nose; in the eye sockets, the upper part of which is painted black, it has globular eyes slit horizontally; the mouth, schematic, small and elongated, is slightly open, without showing the teeth, with two vertical tattoos below, between the mouth and the rounded chin; the circular and double-arched tattoos on the cheeks are common and distinctive among Luena women; the ears are also schematic, semicircular in shape, with linear tattoos in
their centre. The mask has a collar made of braided fibres in a mesh pattern, which conceals the wearer's face
while allowing them to see. In Angola, the dance is sober and elegant, but in Zambia, the dancer moves along a rope stretched between two posts about ten metres above the ground.

Provenance: Berthe Hartert collection
Argiles Collection, Barcelona

Details

No. of items
1
Ethnic group/ culture
Luena
Country of Origin
DR Congo
Period
Mid 20th century
Material
Wood
Sold with stand
No
Condition
Good condition
Height
32 cm
Provenance
Private collection
SpainVerified
Private

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