Nr 101646814

En träskulptur - Mende - Sierra Leone (Utan reservationspris)
Nr 101646814

En träskulptur - Mende - Sierra Leone (Utan reservationspris)
Female Mende Sculpture, Sierra Leone, collected in the Kenema region. The figure stands on wedge-shaped feet, with prominent legs and a slender torso. The arms are held close to the body, hands touching the abdomen. The breasts are large and prominent, the neck columnar and encircled, and the oval head features delicate facial details with a cap-like hairstyle. The surface is dark gray.
Collected in the Kenema region, this standing female figure rests on wedge-shaped feet, with prominent legs and a slender torso. The arms are held close to the body, hands touching the abdomen, and the large, prominent breasts convey ideals of fertility and nurturing. The neck is columnar and encircled, supporting an oval head with delicate facial features and a cap-like hairstyle. The surface is dark gray, polished, and carefully finished.
The Mende people, one of the largest ethnic groups in Sierra Leone and parts of Liberia, are renowned for their sophisticated wooden sculptures, which play a central role in ritual, social, and educational contexts. Mende carvings are primarily associated with the Sande, or female, and Poro, or male, secret societies, which guide initiation rites, moral instruction, and community leadership. Typically carved from hardwood with a polished, often darkened surface, these figures are usually elongated with slender torsos, columnar necks, and oval heads. Facial features are delicate and idealized, with high foreheads and finely incised eyes and mouths. Arms are often held close to the body, with hands resting on the chest or abdomen, and female figures are frequently depicted with prominent breasts, emphasizing their role in fertility and social instruction. Hairstyles are often stylized, sometimes resembling caps or elaborate coiffures, reflecting beauty ideals or social identity.
Female figures are closely associated with the Sande society and were used in initiation rituals, as moral exemplars, or to teach young girls social and spiritual values. Male figures, by contrast, are linked to the Poro society, representing authority, protection, or moral discipline. Mende sculptures are more than decorative objects; they embody social ideals, spiritual authority, and aesthetic norms. They often serve as teaching tools, ceremonial objects, or symbols of female or male virtues, reflecting the deep integration of art and society.
References: John W. Pemberton, Mende Art: From the Sierra Leone Highlands, 1984; Margaret Thompson Drewal & John Pemberton, Sacred Waters: Arts for Mende Divination, 1989; Herbert M. Cole, Mende Blacksmiths, Artists, and Society, 1975; Jean Borgatti & John Pemberton, Mende Sculptures and Social Contexts, in African Arts, Vol. 12, No. 2, 1979; Daniel L. Miller, African Art in Cultural Perspective, 1993.
CAB33234
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