No. 84046731

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Senufo - Côte d'Ivoire  (No Reserve Price)
Final bid
€ 320
1 week ago

Senufo - Côte d'Ivoire (No Reserve Price)

A Rhythm Pounder (Deble) , Ivory Coast, depicting a male Deble sculpture, carved out of one piece of wood, the legs are coming out of the heavy rounded base, a thin abdomen, thick long arms, hands resting near the thighs, the shoulders are rounded, a strong cylindric neck carrying an oval shaped head, the face is finely carved, a small pointed mouth at the end of a large jaw, elongated nose, coffee bean eyes, the hairdo is in the style of a mohawk, the navel, and abdomen are marked with carved scarifications, symbol of beauty and status; aged cracks, signs of use, glossy by use. Certificate of provenance. “These large-scale statue are a very rare work of art among the Senufo, institutional style of professional sculpture, yet on some special occasions large works of art were commissioned by the male Poro society and also by their female counter equivalent society, the Tyekpa society. In the case of the Poro society, large statues of pairs were placed on public display near wooden shrines or shelters where the chosen society’s initiators gathered to celebrate and organize special events and funerals. The Poro society would commission statues such as this one to be carried and used in ritual processions or placed on the ground to serve as a focus point for the ceremonial dancers. These statues might have also functioned as a large fetish figure or shrine-powered object to which ritual sacrifices were made on the statue. This type of sculpture was used in various ritual functions that would have taken place right before or after a Poro elder member died. The statue would have been carried by initiators of the Poro society who would visit the home of the deceased where sometimes the statue may have been placed beside the corpse of the deceased and covered in a shroud and shown to the public. The statue would then be carried in the funeral procession and accompanied the deceased to their burial place. There it was swung and pounded on the ground around the grave in a rhythmic manner in synchronized time to the music of the Poro society orchestra. When the ceremony was complete and before nightfall, the grave was covered with soil as one of the Poro society’s members would perform the final gesture with the statue, leaping onto the grave and pounding the soil seven times. This pounding is to ensure that the spirit of the deceased person didn’t linger in the vicinity of the village compound.” Source: Brauer Museum of Art.

No. 84046731

Sold
Senufo - Côte d'Ivoire  (No Reserve Price)

Senufo - Côte d'Ivoire (No Reserve Price)

A Rhythm Pounder (Deble) , Ivory Coast, depicting a male Deble sculpture, carved out of one piece of wood, the legs are coming out of the heavy rounded base, a thin abdomen, thick long arms, hands resting near the thighs, the shoulders are rounded, a strong cylindric neck carrying an oval shaped head, the face is finely carved, a small pointed mouth at the end of a large jaw, elongated nose, coffee bean eyes, the hairdo is in the style of a mohawk, the navel, and abdomen are marked with carved scarifications, symbol of beauty and status; aged cracks, signs of use, glossy by use. Certificate of provenance.

“These large-scale statue are a very rare work of art among the Senufo, institutional style of professional sculpture, yet on some special occasions large works of art were commissioned by the male Poro society and also by their female counter equivalent society, the Tyekpa society. In the case of the Poro society, large statues of pairs were placed on public display near wooden shrines or shelters where the chosen society’s initiators gathered to celebrate and organize special events and funerals. The Poro society would commission statues such as this one to be carried and used in ritual processions or placed on the ground to serve as a focus point for the ceremonial dancers.

These statues might have also functioned as a large fetish figure or shrine-powered object to which ritual sacrifices were made on the statue. This type of sculpture was used in various ritual functions that would have taken place right before or after a Poro elder member died. The statue would have been carried by initiators of the Poro society who would visit the home of the deceased where sometimes the statue may have been placed beside the corpse of the deceased and covered in a shroud and shown to the public. The statue would then be carried in the funeral procession and accompanied the deceased to their burial place. There it was swung and pounded on the ground around the grave in a rhythmic manner in synchronized time to the music of the Poro society orchestra.

When the ceremony was complete and before nightfall, the grave was covered with soil as one of the Poro society’s members would perform the final gesture with the statue, leaping onto the grave and pounding the soil seven times. This pounding is to ensure that the spirit of the deceased person didn’t linger in the vicinity of the village compound.”
Source: Brauer Museum of Art.

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