一件木雕作品 - Senufo - 象牙海岸 (没有保留价)

08
14
小时
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04
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没有保留价
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  € 750 - € 900
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卖家的描述

A fragmentary female Senufo Debele statue, Boundiali region, Ivory Coast. Incl stand.

This female figure from the Senufo cultural sphere, attributed to the Debele area near Boundiali in northern Côte d’Ivoire, belongs to a sculptural tradition closely associated with initiation societies, especially the Poro and related ritual institutions. Within this context, carved figures functioned as ritual instruments rather than autonomous representations: they were activated within controlled ceremonial environments where knowledge, social discipline, and spiritual authority were transmitted through graded instruction.

The posture of the hands in a “paw-like” configuration is characteristic of several Senufo figural types and contributes to the object’s formal ambiguity between human presence and mediated spiritual embodiment. This gesture, neither fully relaxed nor fully active, suggests a state of readiness, containment, or ritual suspension. It reinforces the idea that the figure is not engaged in worldly action but occupies a threshold condition between physical form and spiritual function. In Senufo visual language, such controlled distortion or stylization is a key means of signaling transformation into an other-than-ordinary state of being.

The female gendering of the figure is significant within Senufo cosmology, where women are often associated with complementary domains of fertility, social continuity, and moral balance. Female figures in Senufo sculpture may be linked to concepts of nurturing, generative force, and the social reproduction of the community, while still participating in the disciplined and hierarchical structure of initiation systems. The carved loincloth is an important detail in this regard, as it anchors the figure within a culturally legible domain of modesty and social identity, while also demonstrating the sculptor’s attention to textile form translated into wood.

The honey-colored patina is a defining aesthetic and material feature. Such surface qualities are not purely decorative but are the result of prolonged handling, ritual use, libations, and environmental exposure. Over time, repeated anointing with oils, plant-based substances, and contact with human hands produces a deep, warm coloration that is often highly valued in Senufo sculpture. This patina is therefore a visual record of biography: it signals duration, activation, and integration into lived ritual practice rather than static display.

Senufo sculpture from the Boundiali and broader Korhogo region is deeply embedded in initiation systems such as the Poro association, which governs moral education, social hierarchy, and spiritual knowledge for men, while complementary associations such as Sandogo may be associated with women’s ritual domains. Figures such as this one are often encountered in contexts of instruction, moral teaching, or ritual protection, where they serve as mnemonic and symbolic supports for complex cosmological and ethical ideas.

Formally, Senufo sculpture from this region is characterized by vertical stability, volumetric clarity, and controlled abstraction. The body is typically compact, with an emphasis on the head, torso, and articulated limbs that remain subordinated to overall structural coherence. The present figure exemplifies this approach through its balanced proportions, stylized gesture, and integrated surface history, all of which contribute to its function as both aesthetic object and ritual instrument.

References

Glaze, Anita J. Art and Death in a Senufo Village. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.

Glaze, Anita J. “Senufo Masks and Figures: Form and Meaning in Poro Ritual.” African Arts 9, no. 3 (1976): 28–35.

Imperato, Pascal James. African Art in Cultural Perspective. New York: Abrams, 2001.

LaGamma, Alisa. Heroic Africans: Legendary Leaders, Iconic Sculptures. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2011.

McNaughton, Patrick R. The Mande Blacksmiths: Knowledge, Power, and Art in West Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988.

Nooter Roberts, Mary. Secrecy: African Art That Conceals and Reveals. New York: Museum for African Art, 1993.

Vogel, Susan Mullin. Africa Explores: 20th Century African Art. New York: Center for African Art, 1991.

This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description.

卖家故事

沃尔菲格·简尼克的对非洲艺术的 involvement 不是从田野或市场开始,而是在一个更安静、更内在的空间——在他父亲留下的纸张、书籍与物件之间。关于德国前殖民地的档案并不是为讲述单一故事而整理;它暗示着多种可能。它邀请审视而非崇敬,并早早教会简尼克:物件永不沉默。它们内含时间——以同一形态承载着断裂与延续——并请求被像文本那样仔细解读。 二十多年多来,简尼克以收藏家、经销商与中介的身份工作,尽管这些称谓都算不上完全贴合他的实践形态。曾经被粗略地归在所谓“部族艺术”的范畴中的事物,从未在他看来是封存的或历史性的类别。它反而是一套活生生的传统,与当下不断协商。其学术培养——民族学、艺术史与比较法——提供了一个语法。语言本身,另在他处学得。在马里、喀麦隆、科特迪瓦、布基纳法索、多哥和加纳,通过反复邂逅逐渐形成的知识,渐渐坚固为关系,并通过逐年累积的信任建立起来。 马里成了这段经历的引力中心。2002年至2012年间,简尼克在巴马科与塞古生活并工作,经营Tribalartforum画廊,俯瞰尼日尔河。这个空间抗拒简单的年代编排。雕塑和陶器与摄影共处一室,马里克·西德贝的作品——展示60年代末70年代马里青年自信而热情的影像,与更早的仪式形式并列悬挂。效果并非让人怀旧,而是澄清:过去与现在并不互相抵消,而是相互 sharpened(请译为“互相锐化”或“彼此清晰化”)彼此。 2012年的战争突然结束了这一章节,正如战争常常所做的那样。但它并未消解这项工作。与阿吉布·卡马特一起,简尼克在洛美再度汇聚,接近许多物件的起源地以及它们继续旅行的路线。自2018年以来,柏林成为这张地图上的又一个点。沃尔夫冈·简尼克画廊现对着查理滕堡宫开设,拥有一支由专家组成的小团队作支持。其关注点,特别放在西非青铜器和赤陶器——这些材料由土地与火塑造,也由难以轻易翻译的记忆形式塑造。 区分简尼克实践的,不仅是地理范围,更是其中的内在张力。田野工作与源流研究并行;商业被视为不可分割的责任的一部分。与博物馆与学术机构合作,流通不再被框定为对世界的掠取,而是一种仍在未完成的伦理过程。目标不是把物件从世界中移除并封存,而是让它们在世界中保持可读性——让它们继续发声,即便发声的条件已在改变。
使用Google翻译翻译

A fragmentary female Senufo Debele statue, Boundiali region, Ivory Coast. Incl stand.

This female figure from the Senufo cultural sphere, attributed to the Debele area near Boundiali in northern Côte d’Ivoire, belongs to a sculptural tradition closely associated with initiation societies, especially the Poro and related ritual institutions. Within this context, carved figures functioned as ritual instruments rather than autonomous representations: they were activated within controlled ceremonial environments where knowledge, social discipline, and spiritual authority were transmitted through graded instruction.

The posture of the hands in a “paw-like” configuration is characteristic of several Senufo figural types and contributes to the object’s formal ambiguity between human presence and mediated spiritual embodiment. This gesture, neither fully relaxed nor fully active, suggests a state of readiness, containment, or ritual suspension. It reinforces the idea that the figure is not engaged in worldly action but occupies a threshold condition between physical form and spiritual function. In Senufo visual language, such controlled distortion or stylization is a key means of signaling transformation into an other-than-ordinary state of being.

The female gendering of the figure is significant within Senufo cosmology, where women are often associated with complementary domains of fertility, social continuity, and moral balance. Female figures in Senufo sculpture may be linked to concepts of nurturing, generative force, and the social reproduction of the community, while still participating in the disciplined and hierarchical structure of initiation systems. The carved loincloth is an important detail in this regard, as it anchors the figure within a culturally legible domain of modesty and social identity, while also demonstrating the sculptor’s attention to textile form translated into wood.

The honey-colored patina is a defining aesthetic and material feature. Such surface qualities are not purely decorative but are the result of prolonged handling, ritual use, libations, and environmental exposure. Over time, repeated anointing with oils, plant-based substances, and contact with human hands produces a deep, warm coloration that is often highly valued in Senufo sculpture. This patina is therefore a visual record of biography: it signals duration, activation, and integration into lived ritual practice rather than static display.

Senufo sculpture from the Boundiali and broader Korhogo region is deeply embedded in initiation systems such as the Poro association, which governs moral education, social hierarchy, and spiritual knowledge for men, while complementary associations such as Sandogo may be associated with women’s ritual domains. Figures such as this one are often encountered in contexts of instruction, moral teaching, or ritual protection, where they serve as mnemonic and symbolic supports for complex cosmological and ethical ideas.

Formally, Senufo sculpture from this region is characterized by vertical stability, volumetric clarity, and controlled abstraction. The body is typically compact, with an emphasis on the head, torso, and articulated limbs that remain subordinated to overall structural coherence. The present figure exemplifies this approach through its balanced proportions, stylized gesture, and integrated surface history, all of which contribute to its function as both aesthetic object and ritual instrument.

References

Glaze, Anita J. Art and Death in a Senufo Village. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.

Glaze, Anita J. “Senufo Masks and Figures: Form and Meaning in Poro Ritual.” African Arts 9, no. 3 (1976): 28–35.

Imperato, Pascal James. African Art in Cultural Perspective. New York: Abrams, 2001.

LaGamma, Alisa. Heroic Africans: Legendary Leaders, Iconic Sculptures. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2011.

McNaughton, Patrick R. The Mande Blacksmiths: Knowledge, Power, and Art in West Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988.

Nooter Roberts, Mary. Secrecy: African Art That Conceals and Reveals. New York: Museum for African Art, 1993.

Vogel, Susan Mullin. Africa Explores: 20th Century African Art. New York: Center for African Art, 1991.

This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description.

卖家故事

沃尔菲格·简尼克的对非洲艺术的 involvement 不是从田野或市场开始,而是在一个更安静、更内在的空间——在他父亲留下的纸张、书籍与物件之间。关于德国前殖民地的档案并不是为讲述单一故事而整理;它暗示着多种可能。它邀请审视而非崇敬,并早早教会简尼克:物件永不沉默。它们内含时间——以同一形态承载着断裂与延续——并请求被像文本那样仔细解读。 二十多年多来,简尼克以收藏家、经销商与中介的身份工作,尽管这些称谓都算不上完全贴合他的实践形态。曾经被粗略地归在所谓“部族艺术”的范畴中的事物,从未在他看来是封存的或历史性的类别。它反而是一套活生生的传统,与当下不断协商。其学术培养——民族学、艺术史与比较法——提供了一个语法。语言本身,另在他处学得。在马里、喀麦隆、科特迪瓦、布基纳法索、多哥和加纳,通过反复邂逅逐渐形成的知识,渐渐坚固为关系,并通过逐年累积的信任建立起来。 马里成了这段经历的引力中心。2002年至2012年间,简尼克在巴马科与塞古生活并工作,经营Tribalartforum画廊,俯瞰尼日尔河。这个空间抗拒简单的年代编排。雕塑和陶器与摄影共处一室,马里克·西德贝的作品——展示60年代末70年代马里青年自信而热情的影像,与更早的仪式形式并列悬挂。效果并非让人怀旧,而是澄清:过去与现在并不互相抵消,而是相互 sharpened(请译为“互相锐化”或“彼此清晰化”)彼此。 2012年的战争突然结束了这一章节,正如战争常常所做的那样。但它并未消解这项工作。与阿吉布·卡马特一起,简尼克在洛美再度汇聚,接近许多物件的起源地以及它们继续旅行的路线。自2018年以来,柏林成为这张地图上的又一个点。沃尔夫冈·简尼克画廊现对着查理滕堡宫开设,拥有一支由专家组成的小团队作支持。其关注点,特别放在西非青铜器和赤陶器——这些材料由土地与火塑造,也由难以轻易翻译的记忆形式塑造。 区分简尼克实践的,不仅是地理范围,更是其中的内在张力。田野工作与源流研究并行;商业被视为不可分割的责任的一部分。与博物馆与学术机构合作,流通不再被框定为对世界的掠取,而是一种仍在未完成的伦理过程。目标不是把物件从世界中移除并封存,而是让它们在世界中保持可读性——让它们继续发声,即便发声的条件已在改变。
使用Google翻译翻译

详细资料

Ethnic group/ culture
Senufo
原产国
象牙海岸
材质
Sold with stand
是的
状态
情况尚佳
艺术品标题
A wooden sculpture
高度
109 cm
重量
13,3 kg
德国经验证
6294
已售出的几件物品
99,69%
protop

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