N. 104186146

Una maschera di legno - Aduma - Gabon (Senza prezzo di riserva)
N. 104186146

Una maschera di legno - Aduma - Gabon (Senza prezzo di riserva)
The Aduma mask shown on Jaenicke-Njoya Archive belongs to the artistic and ritual traditions of the Aduma (also written Duma) peoples of southeastern Gabon, especially along the upper Ogooué River region. Aduma masks are among the most striking forms of Central African masquerade sculpture and are closely related stylistically to the masking traditions of neighboring Kota, Mahongwe, and Kwele groups. Their appearance often combines elongated facial geometry, highly arched brows, narrow slit eyes, and a strong vertical symmetry that gives the face an almost abstract, modern quality. Incl stand.
Historically, Aduma masks were associated with initiation societies, funerary ceremonies, and dances linked to ancestral mediation. Like many masks of the equatorial forest zone, they were not autonomous “art objects” in their original context but activated presences that only became fully meaningful in performance, accompanied by music, costume, movement, and communal ritual. White kaolin pigmentation, frequently found on Aduma masks, symbolized the ancestral world, death, transition, and spiritual purity. The contrast between pale facial surfaces and darker coiffure or border elements intensified the mask’s spectral appearance during dances performed at dusk or firelight.
What makes many Aduma masks particularly remarkable is their extraordinary formal reduction. The faces are often compressed into essential lines and volumes: a long triangular nose, crescent-shaped eyes, and a flattened oval face bordered by elaborate coiffures. This sculptural economy fascinated early twentieth-century European artists and collectors. The refined abstraction of Fang, Kota, and Aduma-related masks strongly influenced the development of modernist sculpture and painting, especially in the circles around Pablo Picasso and Amedeo Modigliani, who admired the elongation and stylized clarity of Central African forms.
Aduma masks differ from the more metallic and reliquary-oriented Kota figures because they preserve a stronger connection to dance performance. Their elongated physiognomies and restrained emotional expression create a sense of calm transcendence rather than theatrical aggression. Many surviving examples show traces of ritual handling, layered patina, pigment abrasion, and smoke deposits, all of which are important indicators of ceremonial life rather than imperfections. In the context of African art history, such surfaces are often valued because they testify to prolonged ritual activation and community use.
Scholars such as Louis Perrois and François Neyt have emphasized that masks from the Upper Ogooué region should not be viewed merely through rigid ethnic categories, since artistic exchange between Aduma, Kota, Mahongwe, and neighboring groups was historically fluid. Styles circulated through trade routes, intermarriage, migration, and ritual networks, producing works that frequently combine characteristics of several regional traditions.
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