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Une sculpture en bois. - Prampram - Ghana
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Il y a 1 semaine

Une sculpture en bois. - Prampram - Ghana

These objects referred to as “Prampram sculptures” can only with difficulty be defined as a clearly bounded, homogeneous group within the artistic landscape of this ethnic group in southern Ghana. The term itself points to the coastal region around Prampram, whose cultural context is shaped largely by Ga-Adangbe-speaking communities. Within this context, ritual wooden figures are far less canonized than in some of the better-known sculptural traditions of West Africa; rather, they emerge situationally, tied to specific ritual practices, shrines, or initiation settings. This embeddedness helps explain the striking formal openness evident in the figure under discussion. The described sculpture, whose form is directly derived from a naturally grown, branching piece of wood, points to a central principle found in many West African artistic traditions, often discussed in terms of “material agency”. Here, the material is not entirely subordinated to artistic intention; instead, its given form is understood as already an intrinsic force. Within animistic worldviews—present in varying forms in southern Ghana—nature itself is endowed with vitality. Wood is not merely raw material but already animated, permeated by spiritual potentials that are revealed or accentuated through minimal intervention. In this respect, a structural affinity can be observed with practices among other West African groups such as the Lobi, whose figures are likewise often developed from naturally pre-shaped wood and whose seemingly “raw” appearance expresses a direct relationship between spirit beings, material, and social space. However, this should not be mistaken for a direct stylistic or cultural continuity; rather, it reflects a shared logic in the engagement with natural form and spirituality. The situational perception of such sculptures - in the light of the bush, at the threshold between day and night - is not merely atmospheric but constitutive of their effect. Rituals staged in transitional zones, both temporal and spatial, mark liminal states in which the boundary between visible and invisible worlds becomes permeable. The sculpture functions less as an autonomous artwork than as a node within a network of relations: between humans, ancestors, local spirits, and the surrounding landscape. Its initial visual indistinguishability from its environment intensifies this role. Only upon closer inspection does difference emerge - a moment of recognition that is itself part of the ritual experience. A comparison with Alberto Giacometti offers a revealing aesthetic perspective. His figure “L'Homme qui marche I” embodies an existential condensation: movement as reduction, as linear progression through space, coupled with radical abstraction and isolation. The Prampram figure, by contrast, appears to propose a counter-model: not linear movement but an oscillating, dance-like dynamic that suggests not directionality but embeddedness. Whereas Giacometti’s figure articulates the modern individual as an isolated subject in an empty space, the African sculpture presents itself as part of a dense web of relations - neither isolated nor reduced, but branching and interconnected. The use of a naturally grown branch further reinforces this impression. Its bifurcations may be read as visual metaphors for multiple connections: between realms, between states of being, between individual and collective. The apparent “wildness” is not a sign of formlessness but follows a distinct logic - one oriented less toward symmetry and proportion than toward presence and efficacy. Ultimately, such sculptures are better understood not as static objects but as processes: manifestations of a worldview in which nature, spirit, and human practice are inseparably intertwined. Their aesthetic quality does not unfold in isolation, as it might in a museum setting, but rather through the interplay of place, time, ritual, and perception. Partly encrusted sacrifucation patina, incl. stand. References: Dogbe, B.K. (1977). "The human form as a central theme in art." Image (Journal of the College of Art), Kumasi.Jaenicke, W. (2017). "Neue Prampram Figuren entdeckt." [YouTube video]. Retrieved from https://wolfgang-jaenicke.comPrampram - Ghana. (2025). Barnebys. Retrieved from https://www.barnebys.com/auctions/lot/prampram-ghana-vNrWAsb-619055287. CAB41117

102746479

Plus disponible
Une sculpture en bois. - Prampram - Ghana

Une sculpture en bois. - Prampram - Ghana

These objects referred to as “Prampram sculptures” can only with difficulty be defined as a clearly bounded, homogeneous group within the artistic landscape of this ethnic group in southern Ghana. The term itself points to the coastal region around Prampram, whose cultural context is shaped largely by Ga-Adangbe-speaking communities. Within this context, ritual wooden figures are far less canonized than in some of the better-known sculptural traditions of West Africa; rather, they emerge situationally, tied to specific ritual practices, shrines, or initiation settings. This embeddedness helps explain the striking formal openness evident in the figure under discussion.

The described sculpture, whose form is directly derived from a naturally grown, branching piece of wood, points to a central principle found in many West African artistic traditions, often discussed in terms of “material agency”. Here, the material is not entirely subordinated to artistic intention; instead, its given form is understood as already an intrinsic force. Within animistic worldviews—present in varying forms in southern Ghana—nature itself is endowed with vitality. Wood is not merely raw material but already animated, permeated by spiritual potentials that are revealed or accentuated through minimal intervention.

In this respect, a structural affinity can be observed with practices among other West African groups such as the Lobi, whose figures are likewise often developed from naturally pre-shaped wood and whose seemingly “raw” appearance expresses a direct relationship between spirit beings, material, and social space. However, this should not be mistaken for a direct stylistic or cultural continuity; rather, it reflects a shared logic in the engagement with natural form and spirituality.

The situational perception of such sculptures - in the light of the bush, at the threshold between day and night - is not merely atmospheric but constitutive of their effect. Rituals staged in transitional zones, both temporal and spatial, mark liminal states in which the boundary between visible and invisible worlds becomes permeable. The sculpture functions less as an autonomous artwork than as a node within a network of relations: between humans, ancestors, local spirits, and the surrounding landscape. Its initial visual indistinguishability from its environment intensifies this role. Only upon closer inspection does difference emerge - a moment of recognition that is itself part of the ritual experience.

A comparison with Alberto Giacometti offers a revealing aesthetic perspective. His figure “L'Homme qui marche I” embodies an existential condensation: movement as reduction, as linear progression through space, coupled with radical abstraction and isolation. The Prampram figure, by contrast, appears to propose a counter-model: not linear movement but an oscillating, dance-like dynamic that suggests not directionality but embeddedness. Whereas Giacometti’s figure articulates the modern individual as an isolated subject in an empty space, the African sculpture presents itself as part of a dense web of relations - neither isolated nor reduced, but branching and interconnected.

The use of a naturally grown branch further reinforces this impression. Its bifurcations may be read as visual metaphors for multiple connections: between realms, between states of being, between individual and collective. The apparent “wildness” is not a sign of formlessness but follows a distinct logic - one oriented less toward symmetry and proportion than toward presence and efficacy.

Ultimately, such sculptures are better understood not as static objects but as processes: manifestations of a worldview in which nature, spirit, and human practice are inseparably intertwined. Their aesthetic quality does not unfold in isolation, as it might in a museum setting, but rather through the interplay of place, time, ritual, and perception.

Partly encrusted sacrifucation patina, incl. stand.

References:

Dogbe, B.K. (1977). "The human form as a central theme in art." Image (Journal of the College of Art), Kumasi.Jaenicke, W. (2017). "Neue Prampram Figuren entdeckt." [YouTube video]. Retrieved from https://wolfgang-jaenicke.comPrampram - Ghana. (2025). Barnebys. Retrieved from https://www.barnebys.com/auctions/lot/prampram-ghana-vNrWAsb-619055287.

CAB41117

Offres terminées
Dimitri André
Expert
Estimation  € 2 700 - € 3 300

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