编号 100236348

已售出
一件木雕 - Nupe - 尼日利亚  (没有保留价)
最终出价
€ 223
2天前

一件木雕 - Nupe - 尼日利亚 (没有保留价)

A Nupe head rest collectedin Bida, Nigeria, with a handle; and geometric patterns carved around the edges and center. Gllossy patina; signs of use and age. Nupe headrests are carved wooden supports associated with the Nupe people of central Nigeria, historically used as personal furniture for resting the head during sleep or repose. They belong to a wider corpus of African headrests that combine utilitarian purpose with culturally specific ideas about the body, posture, and personal adornment. Among the Nupe, whose artistic traditions are especially noted for refined woodcarving, metalwork, and textile production, headrests reflect a sober formal vocabulary shaped by both local aesthetics and long-standing Islamic influence. In form, Nupe headrests are typically compact and carved from a single block of wood. They consist of a gently curved upper surface designed to cradle the neck or back of the head, supported by one or more vertical elements and a stable base. The emphasis is on balance and durability rather than elaborate ornamentation. Surface treatment tends to be restrained, with smooth planes and limited geometric articulation rather than figural carving. This restraint aligns with broader Nupe artistic preferences, which often favor abstraction and clarity of structure over narrative imagery. Functionally, the headrest served several practical purposes. It elevated the head above the ground, reducing contact with insects and dirt, and helped preserve hairstyles, which could carry social or ritual significance. The posture encouraged by the headrest also aligns with ideas of bodily discipline and controlled repose found across many African societies. In this sense, the object mediates between the body and the ground, marking a threshold between waking and sleeping states. Comparable functions have been documented across sub-Saharan Africa, and Nupe headrests can be understood as local expressions of this widespread practice rather than isolated inventions. In museum contexts, Nupe headrests are usually catalogued as twentieth-century works, though the form itself is likely older. Provenanced examples are relatively rare, and detailed ethnographic accounts of their use are limited. As a result, interpretation often relies on stylistic analysis, comparison with better-documented headrest traditions elsewhere in Africa, and broader studies of Nupe material culture. Within collections, these objects are valued not for visual complexity but for their distilled form and the insight they offer into everyday life, bodily care, and the aesthetics of utility among the Nupe. Seen today, Nupe headrests occupy an ambiguous position between sculpture and furniture. Their scale and simplicity invite close attention to proportion, surface, and touch, qualities that resonate with modernist sensibilities while remaining rooted in specific cultural practices. As catalogue objects, they are best understood not as isolated artworks but as elements of a lived environment, shaped by habitual use and embedded in social norms concerning rest, hygiene, and personal presentation. References Brooklyn Museum, collection records for Nupe headrest, wood, twentieth century. Frobenius, Leo, The Voice of Africa, studies on Central Nigerian cultures. Nadel, S. F., A Black Byzantium: The Kingdom of Nupe in Nigeria. Sieber, Roy, and Walker, Roslyn Adele, African Art in the Cycle of Life. Willett, Frank, African Art: An Introduction. CAB27962

编号 100236348

已售出
一件木雕 - Nupe - 尼日利亚  (没有保留价)

一件木雕 - Nupe - 尼日利亚 (没有保留价)

A Nupe head rest collectedin Bida, Nigeria, with a handle; and geometric patterns carved around the edges and center. Gllossy patina; signs of use and age.

Nupe headrests are carved wooden supports associated with the Nupe people of central Nigeria, historically used as personal furniture for resting the head during sleep or repose. They belong to a wider corpus of African headrests that combine utilitarian purpose with culturally specific ideas about the body, posture, and personal adornment. Among the Nupe, whose artistic traditions are especially noted for refined woodcarving, metalwork, and textile production, headrests reflect a sober formal vocabulary shaped by both local aesthetics and long-standing Islamic influence.

In form, Nupe headrests are typically compact and carved from a single block of wood. They consist of a gently curved upper surface designed to cradle the neck or back of the head, supported by one or more vertical elements and a stable base. The emphasis is on balance and durability rather than elaborate ornamentation. Surface treatment tends to be restrained, with smooth planes and limited geometric articulation rather than figural carving. This restraint aligns with broader Nupe artistic preferences, which often favor abstraction and clarity of structure over narrative imagery.

Functionally, the headrest served several practical purposes. It elevated the head above the ground, reducing contact with insects and dirt, and helped preserve hairstyles, which could carry social or ritual significance. The posture encouraged by the headrest also aligns with ideas of bodily discipline and controlled repose found across many African societies. In this sense, the object mediates between the body and the ground, marking a threshold between waking and sleeping states. Comparable functions have been documented across sub-Saharan Africa, and Nupe headrests can be understood as local expressions of this widespread practice rather than isolated inventions.

In museum contexts, Nupe headrests are usually catalogued as twentieth-century works, though the form itself is likely older. Provenanced examples are relatively rare, and detailed ethnographic accounts of their use are limited. As a result, interpretation often relies on stylistic analysis, comparison with better-documented headrest traditions elsewhere in Africa, and broader studies of Nupe material culture. Within collections, these objects are valued not for visual complexity but for their distilled form and the insight they offer into everyday life, bodily care, and the aesthetics of utility among the Nupe.

Seen today, Nupe headrests occupy an ambiguous position between sculpture and furniture. Their scale and simplicity invite close attention to proportion, surface, and touch, qualities that resonate with modernist sensibilities while remaining rooted in specific cultural practices. As catalogue objects, they are best understood not as isolated artworks but as elements of a lived environment, shaped by habitual use and embedded in social norms concerning rest, hygiene, and personal presentation.

References
Brooklyn Museum, collection records for Nupe headrest, wood, twentieth century.
Frobenius, Leo, The Voice of Africa, studies on Central Nigerian cultures.
Nadel, S. F., A Black Byzantium: The Kingdom of Nupe in Nigeria.
Sieber, Roy, and Walker, Roslyn Adele, African Art in the Cycle of Life.
Willett, Frank, African Art: An Introduction.

CAB27962

最终出价
€ 223
Dimitri André
专家
估价  € 150 - € 200

类似物品

类别为您准备的

非洲及部落艺术

设置搜索提醒
设置搜索提醒,以便在有新匹配项目时随时收到通知。

该物品出现在

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

如何在Catawiki上购买

详细了解我们的买家保障

      1. 发现奇珍异品

      饱览数以千计的专家精选的稀奇物品。查看每件稀奇物品的照片、详情和估价。 

      2. 设置最高出价

      找到您喜欢的物品并设置最高出价。您可以关注拍卖直到最后,也可以让系统为您出价。您只需设置可接受的最高出价。 

      3. 安全支付

      当您付款拍下心仪的稀奇物品后,我们会确保货款的安全,直至物品安然交付与您。我们使用受信赖的支付系统来处理所有交易。 

有类似的东西要出售吗?

无论您是在线拍卖的新手还是专业销售,我们都可以帮助您为您的独特物品赚取更多收入。

出售您的物品