编号 101275389

已售出
一个木制面具 - 起重机 - 象牙海岸  (没有保留价)
最终出价
€ 247
7周前

一个木制面具 - 起重机 - 象牙海岸 (没有保留价)

A Kran mask, Côte d’Ivoire, Danané region, the lower jaw is separately crafted and attached to the upper jaw with a kind of reed, passion fruit seeds on the upper lip, a strong nose, empty eye sockets and scarification on the flat forehead; black colour, clear signs of wear. Kran masks from the Danané region of western Côte d’Ivoire belong to the sculptural traditions of the Wé peoples (often grouped historically under the exonym Guéré), who inhabit the forest zone bordering Liberia. In this region, masking traditions are closely tied to ideas of social regulation, spiritual force, and the management of conflict, rather than to lineage commemoration or centralized political authority. Kran masks are among the most powerfully charged forms within Wé visual culture. They are associated with forest spirits and with moments of social tension—warfare, crisis, judicial enforcement, or the containment of antisocial behavior. Unlike masks that embody ideals of beauty or harmony, Kran masks deliberately cultivate an aesthetic of aggression and excess. Protruding tubular eyes, bared teeth, horns, and rough or asymmetrical surfaces produce a confrontational visual impact intended to intimidate and compel obedience. Formally, these masks reject smooth finish and proportional balance. Their construction emphasizes material force: thick wood, heavy volumes, and assertive projection into space. Pigments, sacrificial encrustations, and attachments of fiber or animal elements often intensify their threatening presence. This aesthetic corresponds to their function as instruments of coercive authority, activated in performances where fear itself is a legitimate social tool. In the Danané region, long characterized by interethnic contact and historical instability, Kran masks played a critical role in enforcing communal norms. They were not owned by individuals but by communities or age-based groups, and their appearance in public space marked a temporary suspension of ordinary social relations. The masked figure did not represent a human agent but an externalized force, operating beyond negotiation or appeal. These masks reveal a West African aesthetic in which violence, abstraction, and moral authority are tightly interwoven rather than opposed. CAB31544

编号 101275389

已售出
一个木制面具 - 起重机 - 象牙海岸  (没有保留价)

一个木制面具 - 起重机 - 象牙海岸 (没有保留价)

A Kran mask, Côte d’Ivoire, Danané region, the lower jaw is separately crafted and attached to the upper jaw with a kind of reed, passion fruit seeds on the upper lip, a strong nose, empty eye sockets and scarification on the flat forehead; black colour, clear signs of wear.

Kran masks from the Danané region of western Côte d’Ivoire belong to the sculptural traditions of the Wé peoples (often grouped historically under the exonym Guéré), who inhabit the forest zone bordering Liberia. In this region, masking traditions are closely tied to ideas of social regulation, spiritual force, and the management of conflict, rather than to lineage commemoration or centralized political authority.

Kran masks are among the most powerfully charged forms within Wé visual culture. They are associated with forest spirits and with moments of social tension—warfare, crisis, judicial enforcement, or the containment of antisocial behavior. Unlike masks that embody ideals of beauty or harmony, Kran masks deliberately cultivate an aesthetic of aggression and excess. Protruding tubular eyes, bared teeth, horns, and rough or asymmetrical surfaces produce a confrontational visual impact intended to intimidate and compel obedience.

Formally, these masks reject smooth finish and proportional balance. Their construction emphasizes material force: thick wood, heavy volumes, and assertive projection into space. Pigments, sacrificial encrustations, and attachments of fiber or animal elements often intensify their threatening presence. This aesthetic corresponds to their function as instruments of coercive authority, activated in performances where fear itself is a legitimate social tool.

In the Danané region, long characterized by interethnic contact and historical instability, Kran masks played a critical role in enforcing communal norms. They were not owned by individuals but by communities or age-based groups, and their appearance in public space marked a temporary suspension of ordinary social relations. The masked figure did not represent a human agent but an externalized force, operating beyond negotiation or appeal.

These masks reveal a West African aesthetic in which violence, abstraction, and moral authority are tightly interwoven rather than opposed.

CAB31544

最终出价
€ 247
Julien Gauthier
专家
估价  € 300 - € 380

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