Decorative ornament - 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  € 230 - € 280
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Dogon copper and forged iron rings from Mali, Bandiagara region, dating to ca. 1800–1850, measuring 3 × 4 × 4 cm, in acceptable condition with heavy wear and possibly missing parts; provenance Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris.

AI-assisted summary

Description from the seller

When a hogon, who is a priest of the Lébé, and a priest-ruler of the Dogon, dies, copper rings are put on his fingers and arms. These belong to Lébé, who is particularly associated with copper, a sort of life essence, and are later taken off and given to the next hogon but one. ‘Every Hogon had had the rings in his possession while his predecessor held office. He is impregnated with copper. He is like copper…’ (quoted in Griaule, 1965 : 120).While copper is the metal specifically named, perhaps it is to be read as copper alloy, and therefore many, if not all, of the ornaments in this assemblage may have belonged to a hogon; in such a context the symbolism detectable in design and decoration is wholly appropriate.

Provenance: Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

When a hogon, who is a priest of the Lébé, and a priest-ruler of the Dogon, dies, copper rings are put on his fingers and arms. These belong to Lébé, who is particularly associated with copper, a sort of life essence, and are later taken off and given to the next hogon but one. ‘Every Hogon had had the rings in his possession while his predecessor held office. He is impregnated with copper. He is like copper…’ (quoted in Griaule, 1965 : 120).While copper is the metal specifically named, perhaps it is to be read as copper alloy, and therefore many, if not all, of the ornaments in this assemblage may have belonged to a hogon; in such a context the symbolism detectable in design and decoration is wholly appropriate.

Provenance: Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

Details

Era
1400-1900
Iron type
Cast iron
Specific region of origin
Bandiagara
Number of objects
1
Material
Copper, Iron
Country of origin
Mali
Condition
Fair condition - heavily used & with possibly minor parts missing
Height
3 cm
Width
4 cm
Depth
4 cm
Estimated period
1800-1850
SpainVerified
307
Objects sold
100%
pro

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