Djenne terracota head - Figure - Mali

05
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14
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Current bid
€ 250
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Julien Gauthier
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Selected by Julien Gauthier

A decade of experience in historical arms, armour, and African art.

Estimate  € 600 - € 750
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€250

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Djenne terracotta head, a Mali Djenné-Jeno terracotta sculpture from ca. 1500–1550, provenance: Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris.

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Description from the seller

Between 1100 A.D. and 1700 A.D., terracotta statues were created in the Interior Delta of the Niger River in what is now the Republic of Mali. They are known as Djenné-Jeno terracottas because of their geographic proximity to an ancient town of that name. Some of these statues possess surface excrescences that have long perplexed archaeologists, art historians, curators, and others. This study of these surface excrescences employed clinical, diagnostic, and epidemiological methodologies to elucidate their possible meanings. It has not been possible to ascribe these excrescences to a single cause. However, examination of all the evidence permitted consideration of several possibilities. These include diseases such as smallpox, onchocerciasis, and the secondary stage of venereal syphilis. On certain statues, the anatomic placement of excrescences possibly symbolizes intentional cicatrization that resulted in keloid formation which may have been a form of beautification.

Provenance: Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

Between 1100 A.D. and 1700 A.D., terracotta statues were created in the Interior Delta of the Niger River in what is now the Republic of Mali. They are known as Djenné-Jeno terracottas because of their geographic proximity to an ancient town of that name. Some of these statues possess surface excrescences that have long perplexed archaeologists, art historians, curators, and others. This study of these surface excrescences employed clinical, diagnostic, and epidemiological methodologies to elucidate their possible meanings. It has not been possible to ascribe these excrescences to a single cause. However, examination of all the evidence permitted consideration of several possibilities. These include diseases such as smallpox, onchocerciasis, and the secondary stage of venereal syphilis. On certain statues, the anatomic placement of excrescences possibly symbolizes intentional cicatrization that resulted in keloid formation which may have been a form of beautification.

Provenance: Jean-Michel Huguenin, Paris

Seller's Story

Experts in Ancient African Art
Translated by Google Translate

Details

Era
1400-1900
Number of objects
1
Title
Djenne terracota head
Country of origin
Mali
Material
Terracotta
Sold with stand
No
Condition
Fair condition - heavily used & with possibly minor parts missing
Height
10 cm
Width
8 cm
Depth
7 cm
Estimated period
1500-1550
SpainVerified
311
Objects sold
100%
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