Hunter's mask - Bambara - Mali





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Description from the seller
Mali
Bambara
Wood
Height: 650mm
Width: 175mm
Depth: 100mm
African dance mask made of wood from the Bambara people of Mali -
Rejoicing mask. This type of Bambara mask symbolizes a crest in the shape of an antelope, a symbol of success, and was worn to celebrate the end of good hunts.
Mask full of serenity with a gentle face, well proportioned with a beautiful patina of use.
This mask is representative of Bambara art, with a balance between shapes and volumes and finely carved details.
This mask is extremely stylized, and this form may have inspired Cubist painters of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Beautiful patina of use, lovely serene face with a gentle expression.
Among the Bambara and Malinke, initiation societies (jow) had and still have, to some extent, considerable social and political importance. Some of them, such as Ntomo, Koré and their local equivalents, organize rites of passage: every boy must pass through them to become an adult, then an elder. Other societies such as Komo, Nama, Ci-wara and others of lesser scope are power associations in which one participates to increase one's prestige, to inspire respect and ensure the protection of dependents.
Ntomo prepares boys for circumcision, adulthood, marriage, and initiation into Koré and Komo.
Ntomo is the first initiation society among the Bambara. This society deals with young children from 7 to 13 years old. It was after this first initiation that circumcision used to be practiced. Today, with Islamization, the ceremony still takes place, but circumcision is frequently performed at birth. Young children have tests to pass during the final ceremony. It is on this occasion that the masks dance.
Ntomo masks are anthropomorphic and are topped with braids. The 7 braids would reference the 7 twins of the Ancestor Noun Fa Yiri, but it is common to find masks with a different number of braids, between 3 and 7.
All Ntomo masks feature a bulging forehead and a statuette as a crest, and many cowries frequently adorn the mask, symbols of fertility.
Ntomo mask from the Segou region. Ntomo bo: the Ntomo mask comes out. Ntomo kun: bed, head of Ntomo, Ntomo mask.
The Bambara, also called Banama, form the largest ethnic group in Mali. They occupy the central part of this country, in a savanna-covered region. The Bambara kingdom was founded in the 17th century. Bambara society is, for the most part, structured around six male societies, known as Dyow.
Stylistic variations are very numerous in Bambara art. Sculptures, masks and crests can represent stylized figures or, on the contrary, realistic ones, and a patina can be either eroded or rich.
Bambara artists have created masks, statues, crests, puppets, locks, fetishes, iron figurines, iron staffs.
Parcels are shipped from Monday to Saturday with insurance and tracking number.
Delivery between 1 to 3 days in France with Chronopost, 2 to 5 days across the European Union.
Delivery in the rest of Europe and worldwide with Colissimo international.
We speak english
Mask african art Afrikanische Maskenkunst arte de máscaras africanas arte delle maschere africane
statue african art Arte de estatuas africanas arte delle statue africane Afrikanische Maskenkunst
Máscara de estatua de galería de arte africano
Seller's Story
Mali
Bambara
Wood
Height: 650mm
Width: 175mm
Depth: 100mm
African dance mask made of wood from the Bambara people of Mali -
Rejoicing mask. This type of Bambara mask symbolizes a crest in the shape of an antelope, a symbol of success, and was worn to celebrate the end of good hunts.
Mask full of serenity with a gentle face, well proportioned with a beautiful patina of use.
This mask is representative of Bambara art, with a balance between shapes and volumes and finely carved details.
This mask is extremely stylized, and this form may have inspired Cubist painters of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Beautiful patina of use, lovely serene face with a gentle expression.
Among the Bambara and Malinke, initiation societies (jow) had and still have, to some extent, considerable social and political importance. Some of them, such as Ntomo, Koré and their local equivalents, organize rites of passage: every boy must pass through them to become an adult, then an elder. Other societies such as Komo, Nama, Ci-wara and others of lesser scope are power associations in which one participates to increase one's prestige, to inspire respect and ensure the protection of dependents.
Ntomo prepares boys for circumcision, adulthood, marriage, and initiation into Koré and Komo.
Ntomo is the first initiation society among the Bambara. This society deals with young children from 7 to 13 years old. It was after this first initiation that circumcision used to be practiced. Today, with Islamization, the ceremony still takes place, but circumcision is frequently performed at birth. Young children have tests to pass during the final ceremony. It is on this occasion that the masks dance.
Ntomo masks are anthropomorphic and are topped with braids. The 7 braids would reference the 7 twins of the Ancestor Noun Fa Yiri, but it is common to find masks with a different number of braids, between 3 and 7.
All Ntomo masks feature a bulging forehead and a statuette as a crest, and many cowries frequently adorn the mask, symbols of fertility.
Ntomo mask from the Segou region. Ntomo bo: the Ntomo mask comes out. Ntomo kun: bed, head of Ntomo, Ntomo mask.
The Bambara, also called Banama, form the largest ethnic group in Mali. They occupy the central part of this country, in a savanna-covered region. The Bambara kingdom was founded in the 17th century. Bambara society is, for the most part, structured around six male societies, known as Dyow.
Stylistic variations are very numerous in Bambara art. Sculptures, masks and crests can represent stylized figures or, on the contrary, realistic ones, and a patina can be either eroded or rich.
Bambara artists have created masks, statues, crests, puppets, locks, fetishes, iron figurines, iron staffs.
Parcels are shipped from Monday to Saturday with insurance and tracking number.
Delivery between 1 to 3 days in France with Chronopost, 2 to 5 days across the European Union.
Delivery in the rest of Europe and worldwide with Colissimo international.
We speak english
Mask african art Afrikanische Maskenkunst arte de máscaras africanas arte delle maschere africane
statue african art Arte de estatuas africanas arte delle statue africane Afrikanische Maskenkunst
Máscara de estatua de galería de arte africano
