非洲 Fon 巫偶博西神像,架上摆放 - 贝宁、尼日利亚。

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Julien Gauthier
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在历史武器、盔甲和非洲艺术方面拥有十年的经验。

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非洲 Fon 崇拜偶像 Bocio 雕像,带底座,产地 Benin/Nigeria,71 cm 高,状态极好,产地来源:Galeriehouder / Antiekhandelaar.

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卖家的描述

Nigeria: Large Old Tribal used Fetisch Fon Statue on stand from Benin.

Height: 71 cm high including the stand and 66 cm high without the stand.

This Fon sculpture are dated mid/late 20th century and comes with a certificate of authenticity.

A pole-like Fon/Voodoo sculpture – Bocio – covered in a raffia dress, collected in the border region between Togo and Benin.

The Fon people of the border region between Togo and Benin, often associated with the historical kingdom of Dahomey, produced sculptures primarily for religious and ritual practices related to Vodun (Voodoo). These works are typically small to medium-sized wooden or metal figures, often intended as intermediaries for spiritual communication, protective talismans, or ritual focal points within shrines and sacred spaces.

Common motifs include anthropomorphic figures, sometimes with stylized or exaggerated facial features and proportions, which can emphasize spiritual power or represent specific deities (vodun). Some figures are movable or have movable parts, suggesting their use in ceremonies or divination practices, while others are carved in a more static, abstract manner, intended for long-term placement in domestic or communal shrines. Animal motifs, especially those associated with strength, cunning, or fertility, are also common and reflect the Fon concept of spirits and their manifestations in the natural and social world.

Materialally, Fon sculptures range from carved and painted wood to bronze or copper figures made using the wax casting technique, particularly in regions influenced by the artistic traditions of nearby Benin. Iconographically, these works often demonstrate a close connection between the human and spiritual worlds, with symbolic gestures, scars, and ritual implements integrated into the figures to convey identity, function, or ritual purposes.

Literature on Fon art emphasizes the performative and ritual context, noting that objects are rarely purely aesthetic but function as active participants in religious life. Key sources include Perani's study of Vodun art in Dahomey, Hersak and Beier's survey of ritual objects from West Africa, and recent ethnographic documentation of Fon shrines and Vodun practices in Togo and southern Benin. These sculptures also illustrate the permeability of cultural boundaries in the border region, where Fon, Ewe, and Yoruba influences are often interwoven in both form and ritual meaning.

A selection of publications and museum collections documenting Fon and Vodun sculpture in the Togo-Benin border region includes several important references. Suzanne Preston Blier's African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power (University of Chicago Press, 1995) offers a comprehensive study of Vodun artworks, analyzing their aesthetic, psychological, religious, and social functions. The exhibition catalog Vodun: African Voodoo. The Anne and Jacques Kerchache Collection (Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain, Paris, 2011) brings together nearly one hundred bocio, or fetish figures, from Benin and Togo, accompanied by essays by specialists such as Suzanne Preston Blier, Gabin Djimassé, Marc Augé, and Patrick Vilaire. Asen: Mémoires de fer forgé – Art vodun du Danhomè (Musée Barbier-Müller, Geneva, 2018–2019) documents metal altars, or asen, used for ancestor worship among the Fon, produced between the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, and examines their historical significance, craftsmanship, and ritual use. Ethnographic sources include Auguste Le Hérissé on the history of Dahomey and Paul Mercier's 1952 monograph on asen in the Abomey Museum. Major museum collections include the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, which holds Fon asen from Ouidah, Benin, examples of metal altars used for ancestor worship. The Musée Barbier-Müller in Geneva has a substantial collection of asen, many dating from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. Château Vodou in Strasbourg houses over 1,200 Vodun objects from West Africa, including items from Togo and Benin, and constitutes an important source for Vodun material culture.

These sources cover a variety of object types, including wooden bocio figures, metal altars, and assemblages made of bone, shell, fabric, and pigment. They reflect the diversity of Vodun material culture in the Gbe region and address both ritual and courtly contexts, such as shrine use, ancestor worship, protective fetishes, divination, and royal asen from the former kingdom of Dahomey.

卖家故事

我们的非洲画廊销售政策摘要。 我们的非洲画廊专注于埃塞俄比亚部落艺术,收集和销售来自非洲各地以及埃塞俄比亚特产的部落二手艺术品。 我们的画廊收藏了来自非洲的真实、原创和传统艺术。该藏品包括面具、雕像、陶器、乐器、手稿、头枕和其他古董、原始艺术品和各种不寻常的物品。 我几乎从不直接从非洲购买。我出售的所有物品都是旧的且(部落)使用过的。我的藏品来自欧美私人收藏、拍卖行、经销商同行以及世界各地的其他收藏家。 该网站让您对我们的库存和活动有一个印象。正宗、博物馆品质的非洲部落艺术品,批发价 我们努力让公众更深入地欣赏高品质的非洲艺术,并让所有收藏家都能接触到它们。 这里展示的高品质面具、雕刻品、雕像、神物、动物雕像、仪式物品和青铜器将为任何家庭增添美感,并为任何收藏增添价值。 此外,对迅速消失的非洲原创部落艺术的需求不断增长,使其成为一项合理的投资。 作为长期经验丰富的收藏家,我们精心挑选和鉴定每件文物。这里展示的是由木材或青铜制成的原创、高品质、手工制作的作品,您可以以画廊价格的一小部分购买!多年的传统使用使许多产品变得与众不同。 我们保证每件商品的真实性和您的完全满意。我们尽一切努力研究和记录每件文物的历史。 在我们的画廊中,您会发现我们精选的库存。如果您发现网站上没有的内容,请告诉我们。我们总是有大量网站上没有的商品库存。 如果您没有看到您想要的商品,请告诉我们。我们也许能为您找到它们。 支架 - 支架不包含在价格中, 运输 - 我们在全球范围内运输。我们会尽力在付款后尽快发货,通常每周发货四次。 合并运费 - 对于多件商品的买家,请在购物后给我们发送电子邮件,以获取可降低运费的合并发票。对于紧急交货,我们可以通过 DHL 安排快递运输(产生的额外费用由买方承担)。 送货 – 在收到我们确认商品已发货的电子邮件后,欧洲境内大多数目的地的送货时间为 2 至 8 个工作日,世界其他地区的送货时间为 16 至 21 个工作日。从荷兰寄出的包裹通过荷兰邮政发送,包裹状态可在线追踪。 退款和退货 – 我们的目标是让您完全满意。如果出于任何原因您对购买的商品不是 100% 满意,请将商品退回给我们以获得全额退款或换货。没有麻烦,没有问题。退款将通过 PayPal 或仅由银行发放。运费不予退还。 请联系我们 – 在竞标或购买商品之前如有任何问题、疑虑或澄清。我们通常能够在 24 小时内回复。为了避免垃圾邮件过滤器,请通过非洲画廊消息系统建立初步联系。 感谢您访问我们的网站! 亲切的问候, 吉斯·范·奎克
使用Google翻译翻译

Nigeria: Large Old Tribal used Fetisch Fon Statue on stand from Benin.

Height: 71 cm high including the stand and 66 cm high without the stand.

This Fon sculpture are dated mid/late 20th century and comes with a certificate of authenticity.

A pole-like Fon/Voodoo sculpture – Bocio – covered in a raffia dress, collected in the border region between Togo and Benin.

The Fon people of the border region between Togo and Benin, often associated with the historical kingdom of Dahomey, produced sculptures primarily for religious and ritual practices related to Vodun (Voodoo). These works are typically small to medium-sized wooden or metal figures, often intended as intermediaries for spiritual communication, protective talismans, or ritual focal points within shrines and sacred spaces.

Common motifs include anthropomorphic figures, sometimes with stylized or exaggerated facial features and proportions, which can emphasize spiritual power or represent specific deities (vodun). Some figures are movable or have movable parts, suggesting their use in ceremonies or divination practices, while others are carved in a more static, abstract manner, intended for long-term placement in domestic or communal shrines. Animal motifs, especially those associated with strength, cunning, or fertility, are also common and reflect the Fon concept of spirits and their manifestations in the natural and social world.

Materialally, Fon sculptures range from carved and painted wood to bronze or copper figures made using the wax casting technique, particularly in regions influenced by the artistic traditions of nearby Benin. Iconographically, these works often demonstrate a close connection between the human and spiritual worlds, with symbolic gestures, scars, and ritual implements integrated into the figures to convey identity, function, or ritual purposes.

Literature on Fon art emphasizes the performative and ritual context, noting that objects are rarely purely aesthetic but function as active participants in religious life. Key sources include Perani's study of Vodun art in Dahomey, Hersak and Beier's survey of ritual objects from West Africa, and recent ethnographic documentation of Fon shrines and Vodun practices in Togo and southern Benin. These sculptures also illustrate the permeability of cultural boundaries in the border region, where Fon, Ewe, and Yoruba influences are often interwoven in both form and ritual meaning.

A selection of publications and museum collections documenting Fon and Vodun sculpture in the Togo-Benin border region includes several important references. Suzanne Preston Blier's African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power (University of Chicago Press, 1995) offers a comprehensive study of Vodun artworks, analyzing their aesthetic, psychological, religious, and social functions. The exhibition catalog Vodun: African Voodoo. The Anne and Jacques Kerchache Collection (Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain, Paris, 2011) brings together nearly one hundred bocio, or fetish figures, from Benin and Togo, accompanied by essays by specialists such as Suzanne Preston Blier, Gabin Djimassé, Marc Augé, and Patrick Vilaire. Asen: Mémoires de fer forgé – Art vodun du Danhomè (Musée Barbier-Müller, Geneva, 2018–2019) documents metal altars, or asen, used for ancestor worship among the Fon, produced between the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, and examines their historical significance, craftsmanship, and ritual use. Ethnographic sources include Auguste Le Hérissé on the history of Dahomey and Paul Mercier's 1952 monograph on asen in the Abomey Museum. Major museum collections include the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, which holds Fon asen from Ouidah, Benin, examples of metal altars used for ancestor worship. The Musée Barbier-Müller in Geneva has a substantial collection of asen, many dating from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. Château Vodou in Strasbourg houses over 1,200 Vodun objects from West Africa, including items from Togo and Benin, and constitutes an important source for Vodun material culture.

These sources cover a variety of object types, including wooden bocio figures, metal altars, and assemblages made of bone, shell, fabric, and pigment. They reflect the diversity of Vodun material culture in the Gbe region and address both ritual and courtly contexts, such as shrine use, ancestor worship, protective fetishes, divination, and royal asen from the former kingdom of Dahomey.

卖家故事

我们的非洲画廊销售政策摘要。 我们的非洲画廊专注于埃塞俄比亚部落艺术,收集和销售来自非洲各地以及埃塞俄比亚特产的部落二手艺术品。 我们的画廊收藏了来自非洲的真实、原创和传统艺术。该藏品包括面具、雕像、陶器、乐器、手稿、头枕和其他古董、原始艺术品和各种不寻常的物品。 我几乎从不直接从非洲购买。我出售的所有物品都是旧的且(部落)使用过的。我的藏品来自欧美私人收藏、拍卖行、经销商同行以及世界各地的其他收藏家。 该网站让您对我们的库存和活动有一个印象。正宗、博物馆品质的非洲部落艺术品,批发价 我们努力让公众更深入地欣赏高品质的非洲艺术,并让所有收藏家都能接触到它们。 这里展示的高品质面具、雕刻品、雕像、神物、动物雕像、仪式物品和青铜器将为任何家庭增添美感,并为任何收藏增添价值。 此外,对迅速消失的非洲原创部落艺术的需求不断增长,使其成为一项合理的投资。 作为长期经验丰富的收藏家,我们精心挑选和鉴定每件文物。这里展示的是由木材或青铜制成的原创、高品质、手工制作的作品,您可以以画廊价格的一小部分购买!多年的传统使用使许多产品变得与众不同。 我们保证每件商品的真实性和您的完全满意。我们尽一切努力研究和记录每件文物的历史。 在我们的画廊中,您会发现我们精选的库存。如果您发现网站上没有的内容,请告诉我们。我们总是有大量网站上没有的商品库存。 如果您没有看到您想要的商品,请告诉我们。我们也许能为您找到它们。 支架 - 支架不包含在价格中, 运输 - 我们在全球范围内运输。我们会尽力在付款后尽快发货,通常每周发货四次。 合并运费 - 对于多件商品的买家,请在购物后给我们发送电子邮件,以获取可降低运费的合并发票。对于紧急交货,我们可以通过 DHL 安排快递运输(产生的额外费用由买方承担)。 送货 – 在收到我们确认商品已发货的电子邮件后,欧洲境内大多数目的地的送货时间为 2 至 8 个工作日,世界其他地区的送货时间为 16 至 21 个工作日。从荷兰寄出的包裹通过荷兰邮政发送,包裹状态可在线追踪。 退款和退货 – 我们的目标是让您完全满意。如果出于任何原因您对购买的商品不是 100% 满意,请将商品退回给我们以获得全额退款或换货。没有麻烦,没有问题。退款将通过 PayPal 或仅由银行发放。运费不予退还。 请联系我们 – 在竞标或购买商品之前如有任何问题、疑虑或澄清。我们通常能够在 24 小时内回复。为了避免垃圾邮件过滤器,请通过非洲画廊消息系统建立初步联系。 感谢您访问我们的网站! 亲切的问候, 吉斯·范·奎克
使用Google翻译翻译

详细资料

Sold with stand
是的
状态
极佳状态
艺术品标题
African Fon fetish Bocio statue on stand - Benin - Nigeria.
高度
71 cm
起源
画廊/古董商
荷兰经验证
860
已售出的几件物品
100%
protop

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