编号 102017804

已售出
一件木雕作品 - Losso - 多哥  (没有保留价)
最终出价
€ 320
6天前

一件木雕作品 - Losso - 多哥 (没有保留价)

A Losso sculpture, Northern Togo, posted on a wooden staff, eroded and weathered, incl. blackened stand. The sculptural corpus attributed to the Losso peoples of northern Togo occupies a unique position within the visual cultures of West African art. Emerging from the Kara Region — a topographically diverse zone of savanna plateaus and hills between the Kabiyé Mountains and the Défalé chain — these figures bear witness to a localized aesthetic logic that privileges symbolic force and spiritual presence over the conventions of naturalistic representation. Typically hewn from dense, seasoned hardwood, Losso figures present as compact anthropomorphic forms with a marked reduction of individualizing features. Limbs are either subtly suggested or wholly absent; torsos often assume cylindrical or rhomboid masses that assert a sense of frontal presence and immediacy. Heads may be integrated directly into the bodyplane, creating a structural unity that resists separation into discrete anatomical segments. Surface treatment varies from smooth patina to deeply incised geometric patterning that evokes scarification motifs — parallel hatches, chevrons, or radiating sunbursts — which articulate both corporeal and cosmological syntax. The visual vocabulary of Losso sculpture is characterized by an economy of means and a rigor of abstraction. Facial features, when present, are minimal: incised notches denote eyes and mouth, with perforated pupils that animate the surface with a punctuated gaze. Volumes are bold and assertive, emphasizing mass and weight rather than perspectival illusion, contributing to a sculptural presence that has frequently been likened to modernist abstraction in its deliberate de‑emphasis of representational exactitude. In regional practice, these figures function less as aesthetic objects than as active components of ritual life. Placed within domestic shrines, at thresholds, in granaries, or in communal spaces, the sculptures serve as mediators between the human and the spirit worlds, embedding the ancestral continuum within the governance of everyday affairs. They are consecrated with libations, offerings, and incantations, thereby becoming focal points for protective intercession, fertility rites, and the negotiation of misfortune. The multiplicity of their uses — from guardians of dwellings and stock to possible embodiments of twin spirits or clan founders — underscores the polyvalent ontology of Losso sculpture. Such works are not passive signifiers but agents within lived cosmologies, where material form and spiritual efficacy are inextricably interwoven. Despite their relative absence from early Euro‑American survey histories of African art, Losso figures have garnered increasing attention for the clarity with which they articulate the interdependence of form, function, and belief. Their abstraction, far from a lack of skill, reflects an intentional formal strategy: to embody forces and relations that exceed the visual register of individuality and portraiture. Here, bodies concretize ideas — of protection, continuity, and cosmic order — in sculptural terms that resist easy categorization within Western formalist categories. Losso sculptures articulate a mode of artmaking in which the austerity of form is matched by the depth of cultural investment. They stand as material testimonies to the enduring traditions of northern Togo, enabling viewers — whether in situ or in collections abroad — to encounter the potent intersection of art, ritual, and social life that has sustained these communities across the twentieth century and beyond. Jaenicke-Njoya, N. African Tribal Art: Sculptures from the Losso and Nawdba Peoples. Berlin: Jaenicke-Njoya Collection, 2018. Kérékou, L. Arts et cultures des peuples du Nord-Togo. Lomé: Editions du Togo, 2005. Armes, R. African Art in Context: Ritual and Society in Northern Togo. London: Routledge, 1997. Barnebys. “A Bone Sculpture, Losso, Togo.” Auction entry, 2022. Tribal Art Gallery. “Losso Statues – Northern Togo.” Accessed 2023. Tribalgathering London. “Pair of Losso Figures, Togo.” Accessed 2023. Available at: Wikipedia contributors. “Losso.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed 2023. Available at: Informant Wassiu CAB35661

编号 102017804

已售出
一件木雕作品 - Losso - 多哥  (没有保留价)

一件木雕作品 - Losso - 多哥 (没有保留价)

A Losso sculpture, Northern Togo, posted on a wooden staff, eroded and weathered, incl. blackened stand.

The sculptural corpus attributed to the Losso peoples of northern Togo occupies a unique position within the visual cultures of West African art. Emerging from the Kara Region — a topographically diverse zone of savanna plateaus and hills between the Kabiyé Mountains and the Défalé chain — these figures bear witness to a localized aesthetic logic that privileges symbolic force and spiritual presence over the conventions of naturalistic representation.

Typically hewn from dense, seasoned hardwood, Losso figures present as compact anthropomorphic forms with a marked reduction of individualizing features. Limbs are either subtly suggested or wholly absent; torsos often assume cylindrical or rhomboid masses that assert a sense of frontal presence and immediacy. Heads may be integrated directly into the bodyplane, creating a structural unity that resists separation into discrete anatomical segments. Surface treatment varies from smooth patina to deeply incised geometric patterning that evokes scarification motifs — parallel hatches, chevrons, or radiating sunbursts — which articulate both corporeal and cosmological syntax.

The visual vocabulary of Losso sculpture is characterized by an economy of means and a rigor of abstraction. Facial features, when present, are minimal: incised notches denote eyes and mouth, with perforated pupils that animate the surface with a punctuated gaze. Volumes are bold and assertive, emphasizing mass and weight rather than perspectival illusion, contributing to a sculptural presence that has frequently been likened to modernist abstraction in its deliberate de‑emphasis of representational exactitude.

In regional practice, these figures function less as aesthetic objects than as active components of ritual life. Placed within domestic shrines, at thresholds, in granaries, or in communal spaces, the sculptures serve as mediators between the human and the spirit worlds, embedding the ancestral continuum within the governance of everyday affairs. They are consecrated with libations, offerings, and incantations, thereby becoming focal points for protective intercession, fertility rites, and the negotiation of misfortune.

The multiplicity of their uses — from guardians of dwellings and stock to possible embodiments of twin spirits or clan founders — underscores the polyvalent ontology of Losso sculpture. Such works are not passive signifiers but agents within lived cosmologies, where material form and spiritual efficacy are inextricably interwoven.

Despite their relative absence from early Euro‑American survey histories of African art, Losso figures have garnered increasing attention for the clarity with which they articulate the interdependence of form, function, and belief. Their abstraction, far from a lack of skill, reflects an intentional formal strategy: to embody forces and relations that exceed the visual register of individuality and portraiture. Here, bodies concretize ideas — of protection, continuity, and cosmic order — in sculptural terms that resist easy categorization within Western formalist categories.

Losso sculptures articulate a mode of artmaking in which the austerity of form is matched by the depth of cultural investment. They stand as material testimonies to the enduring traditions of northern Togo, enabling viewers — whether in situ or in collections abroad — to encounter the potent intersection of art, ritual, and social life that has sustained these communities across the twentieth century and beyond.

Jaenicke-Njoya, N. African Tribal Art: Sculptures from the Losso and Nawdba Peoples. Berlin: Jaenicke-Njoya Collection, 2018.
Kérékou, L. Arts et cultures des peuples du Nord-Togo. Lomé: Editions du Togo, 2005.
Armes, R. African Art in Context: Ritual and Society in Northern Togo. London: Routledge, 1997.
Barnebys. “A Bone Sculpture, Losso, Togo.” Auction entry, 2022.
Tribal Art Gallery. “Losso Statues – Northern Togo.” Accessed 2023.
Tribalgathering London. “Pair of Losso Figures, Togo.” Accessed 2023. Available at:
Wikipedia contributors. “Losso.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed 2023. Available at:

Informant Wassiu

CAB35661

最终出价
€ 320
Dimitri André
专家
估价  € 280 - € 330

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