木製の彫刻 - Senufo - Côte d'Ivoire





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A wooden sculpture titled 'A wooden sculpture' from Côte d'Ivoire by the Senufo, standing 126 cm high and weighing 11.6 kg, designed as a rhythm pounder (Déblé) for Poro ritual use, without a stand and in fair condition.
Description from the seller
A female Senufo Rhythmpounder (Déblé), Ivory Coast / northern border region toward Sikasso (Mali), carved from dense hardwood and conceived for use within the ritual sphere of the Poro society. The figure stands in a vertically oriented composition, balancing sculptural clarity with functional force: the elongated body serves as a handle-like axis, while the massive lower element forms the striking base used to produce percussive sound through repeated impact on the ground. Fine touchpatina on the arms and the neck.
The Déblé belongs to a category of so-called “instrument sculptures,” in which form and action are inseparably linked. In ritual performance, initiated members of the Poro society used such objects during funerary ceremonies and initiation sequences, rhythmically pounding the earth to accompany chants, mask performances, and collective movement. The resulting sound is understood not merely as musical accompaniment but as an active medium of communication with ancestral forces, reinforcing transitions between the world of the living and the spiritual domain.
The female aspect of the figure is often interpreted within a complementary cosmological structure that pairs male and female principles as expressions of social and metaphysical completeness. Within this system, the Déblé functions as both a ritual tool and an embodied presence of order, fertility, and continuity.
In B. Gottschalk’s Schwarzafrika, Senufo rhythm pounders are described as rare and conceptually significant works, positioned at the intersection of sculpture, sound, and ritual action. The author emphasizes their role as highly specialized objects of the Poro association, whose meaning cannot be separated from their performative use in context. Their presence in Western collections is comparatively limited, and well-preserved examples with strong ritual patina and documented provenance are considered particularly desirable within the field of African art collecting.
Today, surviving Déblé figures are regarded as key works of classical Senufo sculpture, valued for their synthesis of abstraction, bodily presence, and functional ritual logic, as well as for their rarity and historical depth within both ethnographic and art historical discourse.
Reference list
Gottschalk, B.: Schwarzafrika. Kunst und Kultur im subsaharischen Afrika
Holas, B.: Studies on Senufo sculpture and Poro associations (1957–1978)
Goldwater, R.: Senufo Sculpture from West Africa (1964)
Barbier (ed.): West African Sculpture: Contexts and Forms (1993)
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: entry “Déblé / Senufo rhythm pounder”
UMMA (University of Michigan Museum of Art), object documentation: Senufo ritual sculpture
Sotheby’s African Art Catalogues (various sales, 1970s–2000s)
Christie’s African & Oceanic Art Catalogues (selected Senufo lots)
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Seller's Story
A female Senufo Rhythmpounder (Déblé), Ivory Coast / northern border region toward Sikasso (Mali), carved from dense hardwood and conceived for use within the ritual sphere of the Poro society. The figure stands in a vertically oriented composition, balancing sculptural clarity with functional force: the elongated body serves as a handle-like axis, while the massive lower element forms the striking base used to produce percussive sound through repeated impact on the ground. Fine touchpatina on the arms and the neck.
The Déblé belongs to a category of so-called “instrument sculptures,” in which form and action are inseparably linked. In ritual performance, initiated members of the Poro society used such objects during funerary ceremonies and initiation sequences, rhythmically pounding the earth to accompany chants, mask performances, and collective movement. The resulting sound is understood not merely as musical accompaniment but as an active medium of communication with ancestral forces, reinforcing transitions between the world of the living and the spiritual domain.
The female aspect of the figure is often interpreted within a complementary cosmological structure that pairs male and female principles as expressions of social and metaphysical completeness. Within this system, the Déblé functions as both a ritual tool and an embodied presence of order, fertility, and continuity.
In B. Gottschalk’s Schwarzafrika, Senufo rhythm pounders are described as rare and conceptually significant works, positioned at the intersection of sculpture, sound, and ritual action. The author emphasizes their role as highly specialized objects of the Poro association, whose meaning cannot be separated from their performative use in context. Their presence in Western collections is comparatively limited, and well-preserved examples with strong ritual patina and documented provenance are considered particularly desirable within the field of African art collecting.
Today, surviving Déblé figures are regarded as key works of classical Senufo sculpture, valued for their synthesis of abstraction, bodily presence, and functional ritual logic, as well as for their rarity and historical depth within both ethnographic and art historical discourse.
Reference list
Gottschalk, B.: Schwarzafrika. Kunst und Kultur im subsaharischen Afrika
Holas, B.: Studies on Senufo sculpture and Poro associations (1957–1978)
Goldwater, R.: Senufo Sculpture from West Africa (1964)
Barbier (ed.): West African Sculpture: Contexts and Forms (1993)
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: entry “Déblé / Senufo rhythm pounder”
UMMA (University of Michigan Museum of Art), object documentation: Senufo ritual sculpture
Sotheby’s African Art Catalogues (various sales, 1970s–2000s)
Christie’s African & Oceanic Art Catalogues (selected Senufo lots)
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
Seller's Story
Details
Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers
- Unternehmen:
- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
- Repräsentant:
- Wolfgang Jaenicke
- Adresse:
- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
GERMANY - Telefonnummer:
- +493033951033
- Email:
- w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
- USt-IdNr.:
- DE241193499
AGB
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