N.º 101650041

Uma máscara de madeira - Guro - Costa do Marfim (Sem preço de reserva)
N.º 101650041

Uma máscara de madeira - Guro - Costa do Marfim (Sem preço de reserva)
A Guro mask, Côte d’Ivoire, Oumé region. Incl stand.
This carved wooden mask originates within the Guro (also spelled Guéré or Deng) sculptural tradition of central–western Côte d’Ivoire, specifically associated with the Oumé region, an area renowned for its complex masquerade practices. Guro masking forms a major axis of social performance, public ritual, and moral pedagogy, and masks function as both performative instruments and symbolic embodiments of cosmological, ethical, and ancestral concepts.
Among the Guro, masquerades are not limited to a single society; rather, they encompass a sequence of mask types that appear in distinct ceremonial contexts—funerary rites, agricultural celebrations, initiation periods, and community adjudication. These sequences often follow dynamic choreographies in which masked figures enact roles ranging from comic interludes to moral dramatizations, collectively reinforcing social norms while engaging spectators in shared reflection.
Stylistically, Guro masks are characterized by elaborate surface treatment and richly articulated form. Carved features may include projecting eyes, high relief scarification, stylized hair or crest elements, and appended materials such as raffia, fibers, or cloth that animate the mask during performance. The effects are often strikingly dynamic: broad planes contrast with delicate modeling, and painted pigments enhance visual rhythms visible in motion.
In the Oumé region, certain mask categories—such as Goli, Kpan, or Gle—are particularly significant. Goli masks, for example, appear in paired male (Goli Gigé) and female (Goli Klé) ensembles during major public cycles, representing social dualities and communal equilibrium. Kpan masks often serve funeral or purification functions, while Gle figures can embody forest spirits or moral forces that negotiate human conduct and cosmic order.
Functionally, Guro masks operate as performative mediators: their activity in space and time embodies moral discourse, enacts social regulation, and materializes intangible forces. The mask’s meaning is not found solely within its carved form but in its activation through dance, ritual timing, and communal engagement. Its role extends beyond aesthetic expression to become a living presence that participates in social negotiation, spiritual alignment, and cultural continuity.
From an academic perspective, a Guro mask from the Oumé region exemplifies how West African masquerade traditions integrate formal artistry, embodied performance, and social function—where carved objects are not static artworks but operational agents within lived cultural systems.
CAB33618
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