Primordial couple - Szobor - Mali
Nr. 82823853
Dan - Elefántcsontpart (Nincs minimálár)
Nr. 82823853
Dan - Elefántcsontpart (Nincs minimálár)
A Dan ceremonial ladle, Ivory Coast, where the handle portrays the lower part of a female body and the spoon symbolically represents the head, the legs are sturdy and thick, slightly apart and bent,on both of the thighs a carving of a leaf, the navel is surrounded by carving of four leaves pointing in all four directions, below the navel rests a waist band, minor scratches and signs of use, Certificate of origin and provenance.
“Artists in Dan communities of Liberia and Côte d’Ivoire have mastered the art of carving impressive wooden ladles that are virtuoso works of sculpture. These ceremonial ladles, known as wunkirmian or wakemia (which translates as "spoon associated with feasts") are badges of prestige acknowledging an individual woman for her incomparable generosity. Oversized (they can measure up to two feet), they are not so much utilitarian objects as symbols of status and the bearer of spiritual powers. Quality of craftsmanship and complexity of design are constitutive of the work’s importance […] To create such esteemed objects, Dan sculptors often rely on anthropomorphic forms and draw upon elements of style developed in other carvings such as masks and figures. […] Other variations include representations of a human hand, animal heads such as goats or cow, small bowls, and a variety of abstract designs. […]
Emblematic of honor and status, wunkirmian are the possession of the wunkirle or wakede, "at feasts acting woman." A title of great distinction, it is given to the most hospitable woman of a village quarter […] the wunkirle must be of a generous disposition, gladly offering her hospitality to anyone at any time, organizing and providing for important meals, and feeding travelers. […] In addition to being emblems of honor, wunkirmian also hold spiritual power (Himmelheber and Tabmen 1965, 177). They are a Dan woman's chief liaison with the power of the spirit world and a symbol of that connection.”
In 1926, Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966) drew inspiration from the Dan people's interpretation of the relationship between a woman's womb and a spoon's bowl. His sculpture, Spoon Woman (Femme Cuillère), reflects the admiration that many artists of his generation had for the bold reinterpretations of the human body expressed by artists from West and Central Africa.
Lit: Yaëlle Biro, The MET, 2016.
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