A bone sculpture - Benin - Nigeria

07
days
09
hours
34
minutes
55
seconds
Current bid
€ 75
Reserve price not met
Dimitri André
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Selected by Dimitri André

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

Estimate  € 400 - € 450
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PTBidder 2654
€75

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A bone sculpture from Nigeria’s Benin culture, a ram pendant carved in bone, 9 cm high, 43 g, in fair condition.

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Description from the seller

A Benin bone pendant, southern Nigeria, region of Benin City. Signs of age.

This carved bone pendant depicting a ram reflects the sophisticated symbolic vocabulary associated with the historic Kingdom of Benin. Ram imagery in Benin court art is commonly linked to strength, sacrificial potency, and controlled aggression—qualities aligned with royal authority and ritual legitimacy.

The horns, rendered laterally in geometric abstraction, emphasize balance and symmetry. Their stylization transforms the animal into a heraldic sign, consistent with Edo preferences for formal clarity and emblematic compression.

Particularly notable is the treatment of the mouth as an interlaced motif. This design, repeated symmetricallyin a doubled form on both cheeks, suggests continuity, cyclical force, and regenerative power. In Edo visual logic, interlace patterns often evoke ideas of unbroken lineage, enduring sovereignty, and the perpetual renewal of spiritual authority.

Bone as material reinforces themes of durability and ancestral presence and it may have functioned as personal insignia, protective amulet, or marker of affiliation with courtly ideology. The geometric reduction of the ram, combined with the doubled interlace motif, situates the object within a broader Benin aesthetic characterized by rhythmic symmetry, emblematic clarity, and the condensation of cosmological meaning into compact, wearable form.

CAB33694

Seller's Story

Wolfgang Jaenicke’s engagement with African art did not begin in the field or the marketplace but in a quieter, more inward space—among papers, books, and objects that belonged to his father. The archive on Germany’s former colonies was not arranged to tell a single story; it suggested many. It invited scrutiny rather than reverence, and it taught Jaenicke early on that objects are never mute. They carry time inside them—fracture and continuity held in the same form—and they ask to be read as carefully as texts. For more than a quarter century, Jaenicke has worked as a collector, dealer, and intermediary, though none of these terms quite captures the shape of his practice. What used to be grouped, too casually, under the heading of “Tribal Art” has never appeared to him as a sealed or historical category. It is, instead, a set of living traditions, constantly negotiating the present. His academic training—in ethnology, art history, and comparative law—provided a grammar. The language itself he learned elsewhere. In Mali, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Togo, and Ghana, knowledge emerged slowly, through repeated encounters that hardened into relationships, and through trust built not all at once but over years. Mali became the gravitational center of this experience. Between 2002 and 2012, Jaenicke lived and worked in Bamako and Ségou, where he ran Tribalartforum, a gallery overlooking the Niger River. The space resisted easy chronology. Sculptures and ceramics shared the room with photography, and works by Malick Sidibé—images of Malian youth in the 1970s, self-assured and exuberant—hung alongside older ritual forms. The effect was not nostalgic but clarifying: past and present did not cancel each other out; they sharpened one another. The war of 2012 ended this chapter abruptly, as wars tend to do. But it did not dissolve the work. Together with Aguibou Kamaté, Jaenicke regrouped in Lomé, closer to the places where many of the objects originated and to the routes they continue to travel. Since 2018, Berlin has become another point on this map. Galerie Wolfgang Jaenicke now operates opposite Charlottenburg Palace, supported by a small team of specialists. Its focus rests, in particular, on West African bronzes and terracottas—materials shaped by earth and fire, and by forms of memory that resist easy translation. What distinguishes Jaenicke’s practice is not only its geographical range but its internal tension. Fieldwork is paired with provenance research; commerce is treated as inseparable from responsibility. In collaboration with museums and scholarly initiatives, circulation is framed not as extraction but as an ethical process that remains unfinished. The aim is not to remove objects from the world and seal them off, but to keep them readable within it—to allow them to continue speaking, even as the conditions of their speech change.

A Benin bone pendant, southern Nigeria, region of Benin City. Signs of age.

This carved bone pendant depicting a ram reflects the sophisticated symbolic vocabulary associated with the historic Kingdom of Benin. Ram imagery in Benin court art is commonly linked to strength, sacrificial potency, and controlled aggression—qualities aligned with royal authority and ritual legitimacy.

The horns, rendered laterally in geometric abstraction, emphasize balance and symmetry. Their stylization transforms the animal into a heraldic sign, consistent with Edo preferences for formal clarity and emblematic compression.

Particularly notable is the treatment of the mouth as an interlaced motif. This design, repeated symmetricallyin a doubled form on both cheeks, suggests continuity, cyclical force, and regenerative power. In Edo visual logic, interlace patterns often evoke ideas of unbroken lineage, enduring sovereignty, and the perpetual renewal of spiritual authority.

Bone as material reinforces themes of durability and ancestral presence and it may have functioned as personal insignia, protective amulet, or marker of affiliation with courtly ideology. The geometric reduction of the ram, combined with the doubled interlace motif, situates the object within a broader Benin aesthetic characterized by rhythmic symmetry, emblematic clarity, and the condensation of cosmological meaning into compact, wearable form.

CAB33694

Seller's Story

Wolfgang Jaenicke’s engagement with African art did not begin in the field or the marketplace but in a quieter, more inward space—among papers, books, and objects that belonged to his father. The archive on Germany’s former colonies was not arranged to tell a single story; it suggested many. It invited scrutiny rather than reverence, and it taught Jaenicke early on that objects are never mute. They carry time inside them—fracture and continuity held in the same form—and they ask to be read as carefully as texts. For more than a quarter century, Jaenicke has worked as a collector, dealer, and intermediary, though none of these terms quite captures the shape of his practice. What used to be grouped, too casually, under the heading of “Tribal Art” has never appeared to him as a sealed or historical category. It is, instead, a set of living traditions, constantly negotiating the present. His academic training—in ethnology, art history, and comparative law—provided a grammar. The language itself he learned elsewhere. In Mali, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Togo, and Ghana, knowledge emerged slowly, through repeated encounters that hardened into relationships, and through trust built not all at once but over years. Mali became the gravitational center of this experience. Between 2002 and 2012, Jaenicke lived and worked in Bamako and Ségou, where he ran Tribalartforum, a gallery overlooking the Niger River. The space resisted easy chronology. Sculptures and ceramics shared the room with photography, and works by Malick Sidibé—images of Malian youth in the 1970s, self-assured and exuberant—hung alongside older ritual forms. The effect was not nostalgic but clarifying: past and present did not cancel each other out; they sharpened one another. The war of 2012 ended this chapter abruptly, as wars tend to do. But it did not dissolve the work. Together with Aguibou Kamaté, Jaenicke regrouped in Lomé, closer to the places where many of the objects originated and to the routes they continue to travel. Since 2018, Berlin has become another point on this map. Galerie Wolfgang Jaenicke now operates opposite Charlottenburg Palace, supported by a small team of specialists. Its focus rests, in particular, on West African bronzes and terracottas—materials shaped by earth and fire, and by forms of memory that resist easy translation. What distinguishes Jaenicke’s practice is not only its geographical range but its internal tension. Fieldwork is paired with provenance research; commerce is treated as inseparable from responsibility. In collaboration with museums and scholarly initiatives, circulation is framed not as extraction but as an ethical process that remains unfinished. The aim is not to remove objects from the world and seal them off, but to keep them readable within it—to allow them to continue speaking, even as the conditions of their speech change.

Details

Ethnic group/ culture
Benin
Country of Origin
Nigeria
Material
Bone
Sold with stand
No
Condition
Fair condition
Title of artwork
A bone sculpture
Height
9 cm
Weight
43 g
GermanyVerified
5894
Objects sold
99.55%
protop

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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