一个陶土器皿 - 亚当瓦 - 尼日利亚 (没有保留价)





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题名为《A terracotta vessel》的赤陶器,来自尼日利亚亚当瓦地区的亚当瓦文化,附带底座,高34厘米,重1.8公斤,状况公平。
卖家的描述
An Adamawa healing vessel in anthropomorphic-zoomorphic form belongs to one of the most distinctive ceramic traditions of the Adamawa Plateau region of northeastern Nigeria and northern Cameroon. These vessels, often combining human and animal characteristics within a single sculptural body, occupy an intermediate position between utilitarian pottery and ritual sculpture. Their visual language reflects a cosmology in which humans, animals, ancestors, and spiritual forces were understood as interconnected domains rather than separate categories of existence. Incl stand. Without any laboratory tests, the attribution is provided for reference only, based on our knowledge in the field.
The earliest documented European observations of such vessels derive from the German expeditions into Adamawa during the late nineteenth century. Particularly significant is the account of Dr. Siegfried Passarge, who participated in the expedition of the German Cameroon Committee in 1893–94. In his published report he noted that members of the expedition acquired a remarkable water vessel painted in black, white, and red pigments and representing a human body complete with head and hands. Passarge further remarked that similar and exceptionally fine vessels had previously been collected by Eduard Robert Flegel and deposited in the collections of the Berlin Museum of Ethnology. This brief description is important because it demonstrates that figurative ceramic vessels were already recognized as distinctive cultural objects in Adamawa at the end of the nineteenth century.
Although Passarge described the object as a water vessel, subsequent ethnographic research suggests that many anthropomorphic and zoomorphic pots served functions extending beyond ordinary domestic use. Throughout the Adamawa region, among groups such as the Chamba, Mumuye, Vere, Fali, and related peoples, containers incorporating human or animal imagery were often associated with medicinal substances, ritual liquids, protective preparations, and offerings directed toward ancestral or spiritual powers. Their unusual forms transformed the vessel itself into an active participant in ritual processes rather than a neutral container.
Healing vessels were frequently employed in therapeutic contexts involving herbal medicines, water infused with medicinal plants, or substances prepared by ritual specialists. The human features of the vessel may have represented the afflicted body, while animal elements invoked specific qualities such as strength, vigilance, fertility, endurance, or protection. In many African healing traditions the efficacy of medicine derives not solely from its physical ingredients but from its ability to establish relationships between visible and invisible realms. The vessel thus functioned as a mediator through which healing forces could be activated and directed.
The combination of anthropomorphic and zoomorphic features reflects a broader symbolic principle found throughout the Benue and Adamawa regions. Animals were often regarded as embodiments of spiritual capacities unavailable to ordinary humans. By integrating animal attributes into a human form, the vessel visualized a state of transformation and empowerment. Such imagery may have reinforced the healing process by suggesting the restoration of balance between the patient, the community, and the spiritual world.
Dr. Sigfried Passarge, Adamaua, Bericht über die Expedition des Deutschen Kamerun-Komitees, 1893/94, Belin 1895, s. 20 "der Kaptain, der mit dem Boote an Land ging, brachte einen schönen Wasserkrug mit, welcher mit schwarzen, weissen und rothen Farben bemalt war und einen menschlichen Körper mit Kopf und Händen darstellte. Von dem selben Ort hat bereits Flegel einige prachtvolle Töpfe mitgebracht, welche sich im Berliner Museum für Völkerkunde befinden." (last photo sequence).
saeological and ethnographic evidence indicates a long continuity of sophisticated ceramic production in the Benue–Adamawa area. The figurative vessels collected by Flegel and Passarge represent only a small surviving portion of what was once a much richer ceramic tradition. Many examples disappeared through breakage, abandonment, or changing religious practices during the colonial and postcolonial periods. As a result, nineteenth-century documented examples have become especially valuable for reconstructing the historical development of Adamawa ritual arts.
In contemporary contexts, the original ritual functions of many such vessels have diminished or disappeared, particularly in communities influenced by Islam, Christianity, urbanization, and modern medical systems. Nevertheless, traditional healing practices remain active in certain rural areas, and ritual specialists continue to employ ceramic containers for medicinal and spiritual purposes. Even where the original functions have ceased, anthropomorphic healing vessels retain considerable cultural significance as material expressions of indigenous knowledge systems, local histories, and artistic traditions. They are increasingly appreciated as embodiments of regional identity and as important testimonies to the intellectual and spiritual heritage of the Adamawa peoples.
The vessel's significance today therefore lies not only in its former ritual efficacy but also in its role as historical evidence. It preserves a visual record of concepts of healing, personhood, transformation, and the relationship between humans and the spirit world that were central to Adamawa societies before the profound social and religious changes of the twentieth century.
References
Passarge, Siegfried. Adamaua. Bericht über die Expedition des Deutschen Kamerun-Komitees in den Jahren 1893/94. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer, 1895.
Flegel, Eduard Robert. Die Niger-Benue-Expedition. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung, 1886–1889.
Gebauer, Paul. Art of Cameroon. Portland: Portland Art Museum, 1979.
Barley, Nigel. Smashing Pots: Works of Clay from Africa. London: British Museum Press, 1994.
Gardi, Bernhard. Indigenous African Architecture and Decorative Arts of the Cameroon Grassfields. Milan: 5 Continents Editions, 2003.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic, archaeological, and historical sources.
卖家故事
An Adamawa healing vessel in anthropomorphic-zoomorphic form belongs to one of the most distinctive ceramic traditions of the Adamawa Plateau region of northeastern Nigeria and northern Cameroon. These vessels, often combining human and animal characteristics within a single sculptural body, occupy an intermediate position between utilitarian pottery and ritual sculpture. Their visual language reflects a cosmology in which humans, animals, ancestors, and spiritual forces were understood as interconnected domains rather than separate categories of existence. Incl stand. Without any laboratory tests, the attribution is provided for reference only, based on our knowledge in the field.
The earliest documented European observations of such vessels derive from the German expeditions into Adamawa during the late nineteenth century. Particularly significant is the account of Dr. Siegfried Passarge, who participated in the expedition of the German Cameroon Committee in 1893–94. In his published report he noted that members of the expedition acquired a remarkable water vessel painted in black, white, and red pigments and representing a human body complete with head and hands. Passarge further remarked that similar and exceptionally fine vessels had previously been collected by Eduard Robert Flegel and deposited in the collections of the Berlin Museum of Ethnology. This brief description is important because it demonstrates that figurative ceramic vessels were already recognized as distinctive cultural objects in Adamawa at the end of the nineteenth century.
Although Passarge described the object as a water vessel, subsequent ethnographic research suggests that many anthropomorphic and zoomorphic pots served functions extending beyond ordinary domestic use. Throughout the Adamawa region, among groups such as the Chamba, Mumuye, Vere, Fali, and related peoples, containers incorporating human or animal imagery were often associated with medicinal substances, ritual liquids, protective preparations, and offerings directed toward ancestral or spiritual powers. Their unusual forms transformed the vessel itself into an active participant in ritual processes rather than a neutral container.
Healing vessels were frequently employed in therapeutic contexts involving herbal medicines, water infused with medicinal plants, or substances prepared by ritual specialists. The human features of the vessel may have represented the afflicted body, while animal elements invoked specific qualities such as strength, vigilance, fertility, endurance, or protection. In many African healing traditions the efficacy of medicine derives not solely from its physical ingredients but from its ability to establish relationships between visible and invisible realms. The vessel thus functioned as a mediator through which healing forces could be activated and directed.
The combination of anthropomorphic and zoomorphic features reflects a broader symbolic principle found throughout the Benue and Adamawa regions. Animals were often regarded as embodiments of spiritual capacities unavailable to ordinary humans. By integrating animal attributes into a human form, the vessel visualized a state of transformation and empowerment. Such imagery may have reinforced the healing process by suggesting the restoration of balance between the patient, the community, and the spiritual world.
Dr. Sigfried Passarge, Adamaua, Bericht über die Expedition des Deutschen Kamerun-Komitees, 1893/94, Belin 1895, s. 20 "der Kaptain, der mit dem Boote an Land ging, brachte einen schönen Wasserkrug mit, welcher mit schwarzen, weissen und rothen Farben bemalt war und einen menschlichen Körper mit Kopf und Händen darstellte. Von dem selben Ort hat bereits Flegel einige prachtvolle Töpfe mitgebracht, welche sich im Berliner Museum für Völkerkunde befinden." (last photo sequence).
saeological and ethnographic evidence indicates a long continuity of sophisticated ceramic production in the Benue–Adamawa area. The figurative vessels collected by Flegel and Passarge represent only a small surviving portion of what was once a much richer ceramic tradition. Many examples disappeared through breakage, abandonment, or changing religious practices during the colonial and postcolonial periods. As a result, nineteenth-century documented examples have become especially valuable for reconstructing the historical development of Adamawa ritual arts.
In contemporary contexts, the original ritual functions of many such vessels have diminished or disappeared, particularly in communities influenced by Islam, Christianity, urbanization, and modern medical systems. Nevertheless, traditional healing practices remain active in certain rural areas, and ritual specialists continue to employ ceramic containers for medicinal and spiritual purposes. Even where the original functions have ceased, anthropomorphic healing vessels retain considerable cultural significance as material expressions of indigenous knowledge systems, local histories, and artistic traditions. They are increasingly appreciated as embodiments of regional identity and as important testimonies to the intellectual and spiritual heritage of the Adamawa peoples.
The vessel's significance today therefore lies not only in its former ritual efficacy but also in its role as historical evidence. It preserves a visual record of concepts of healing, personhood, transformation, and the relationship between humans and the spirit world that were central to Adamawa societies before the profound social and religious changes of the twentieth century.
References
Passarge, Siegfried. Adamaua. Bericht über die Expedition des Deutschen Kamerun-Komitees in den Jahren 1893/94. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer, 1895.
Flegel, Eduard Robert. Die Niger-Benue-Expedition. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung, 1886–1889.
Gebauer, Paul. Art of Cameroon. Portland: Portland Art Museum, 1979.
Barley, Nigel. Smashing Pots: Works of Clay from Africa. London: British Museum Press, 1994.
Gardi, Bernhard. Indigenous African Architecture and Decorative Arts of the Cameroon Grassfields. Milan: 5 Continents Editions, 2003.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic, archaeological, and historical sources.
卖家故事
详细资料
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