青铜雕塑 - 哇哦! - Benin - 尼日利亚

04
14
小时
12
分钟
43
当前出价
€ 353
未及保留价
Julien Gauthier
专家
由Julien Gauthier精选

在历史武器、盔甲和非洲艺术方面拥有十年的经验。

估价  € 1,200 - € 1,500
37名其他人正在关注此物品
NL
€353
NL
€333
RO
€190

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一件青铜雕塑,题名《A bronze sculpture》,来自尼日利亚贝宁,描绘一位奥巴,高71厘米,重14.4千克,状况一般。

AI辅助摘要

卖家的描述

This cast brass figure of an Oba from the Kingdom of Benin, Nigeria, articulates the visual grammar of sovereignty developed at the royal court from the fifteenth century onward. The ruler stands frontal and self-contained, enveloped in a long, columnar garment that suppresses bodily movement in favor of hierarchical stillness. In his hand he holds a rattle staff, an object associated with ritual authority and the capacity to summon and regulate forces within the courtly and spiritual domains. The neck is densely encircled with strands of coral beads, whose material and chromatic intensity signify royal privilege, wealth, and the Oba’s mediating role between the human and ancestral spheres. A cap with pointed, spike-like projections crowns the head, echoing forms known from other regalia and underscoring the charged surface of the body as a site of power. In absence of laboratory tests, the age and attribution of this piece stay subject to authentication.

The sculpture’s surface is marked by a heavily oxidized patina, with multiple layers of encrustation that both obscure and enrich the original casting. These accretions testify to age, burial or storage conditions, and subsequent histories of circulation, while also contributing to the object’s aesthetic presence. The underlying lost-wax technique reveals a high degree of technical mastery, evident in the crisp articulation of details despite the corrosion. As with many Benin bronzes, the figure operates not as a portrait in the Western sense but as an index of office, encoding ideals of kingship, continuity, and ritual efficacy. Its formal restraint and symbolic density align it with a corpus that has become central to discussions of African court art, colonial displacement, and the ethics of collection.

Selected literature
Philip J. C. Dark, “An Introduction to Benin Art and Technology”
Barbara Plankensteiner, ed., “Benin: Kings and Rituals—Court Arts from Nigeria”
Paula Girshick Ben-Amos, “The Art of Benin”
Dan Hicks, “The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitution”

#afrohemian26

卖家故事

使用Google翻译翻译

This cast brass figure of an Oba from the Kingdom of Benin, Nigeria, articulates the visual grammar of sovereignty developed at the royal court from the fifteenth century onward. The ruler stands frontal and self-contained, enveloped in a long, columnar garment that suppresses bodily movement in favor of hierarchical stillness. In his hand he holds a rattle staff, an object associated with ritual authority and the capacity to summon and regulate forces within the courtly and spiritual domains. The neck is densely encircled with strands of coral beads, whose material and chromatic intensity signify royal privilege, wealth, and the Oba’s mediating role between the human and ancestral spheres. A cap with pointed, spike-like projections crowns the head, echoing forms known from other regalia and underscoring the charged surface of the body as a site of power. In absence of laboratory tests, the age and attribution of this piece stay subject to authentication.

The sculpture’s surface is marked by a heavily oxidized patina, with multiple layers of encrustation that both obscure and enrich the original casting. These accretions testify to age, burial or storage conditions, and subsequent histories of circulation, while also contributing to the object’s aesthetic presence. The underlying lost-wax technique reveals a high degree of technical mastery, evident in the crisp articulation of details despite the corrosion. As with many Benin bronzes, the figure operates not as a portrait in the Western sense but as an index of office, encoding ideals of kingship, continuity, and ritual efficacy. Its formal restraint and symbolic density align it with a corpus that has become central to discussions of African court art, colonial displacement, and the ethics of collection.

Selected literature
Philip J. C. Dark, “An Introduction to Benin Art and Technology”
Barbara Plankensteiner, ed., “Benin: Kings and Rituals—Court Arts from Nigeria”
Paula Girshick Ben-Amos, “The Art of Benin”
Dan Hicks, “The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitution”

#afrohemian26

卖家故事

使用Google翻译翻译

详细资料

Indigenous object name
Oba
Ethnic group/ culture
Benin
原产国
尼日利亚
材质
黄铜色
Sold with stand
不是
状态
情况尚佳
艺术品标题
A bronze sculpture
高度
71 cm
重量
14,4 kg
德国经验证
6201
已售出的几件物品
99,69%
protop

Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers

Unternehmen:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Repräsentant:
Wolfgang Jaenicke
Adresse:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
GERMANY
Telefonnummer:
+493033951033
Email:
w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
USt-IdNr.:
DE241193499

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