編號 101644737

一个木质雕塑 - Bété. - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)
編號 101644737

一个木质雕塑 - Bété. - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)
A Beté, sculpture, Ivory Coast, collected in the region of Gahizapo, of segmented, slightly cubistic shape; blackened, partly glossy patina, incl. stand.
Beté sculpture from Côte d’Ivoire belongs to the artistic traditions of the Kru-speaking peoples of the country’s western forest zone. The Beté inhabit areas between the Sassandra and Bandama rivers, and sculptural production has been documented in several localities, including villages such as Gahizapo. Works collected in that region reflect the broader aesthetic and ritual concerns of western Ivorian forest cultures, while also showing local carving preferences.
Beté figures are typically carved in wood and are associated with protection, mediation with spiritual forces, and social regulation. As in many forest societies of western Côte d’Ivoire, sculpture was not primarily decorative but operative. Figures could serve as spirit containers, protective presences in domestic or communal shrines, or as adjuncts to masking traditions. Their efficacy depended less on naturalistic representation than on their capacity to embody or attract spiritual force.
Stylistically, Beté sculpture is often characterized by expressive distortion and strong emotional charge. Faces may display exaggerated features: wide, circular or tubular eyes; projecting or open mouths sometimes showing teeth; and sharply defined noses. The head frequently dominates the composition, underscoring its conceptual importance as the seat of perception and spiritual power. Bodies can be compact and block-like, with abbreviated limbs and a pronounced frontality. Surface treatment ranges from relatively smooth to roughly worked, sometimes retaining tool marks that enhance the figure’s vitality.
Compared to neighboring Baule sculpture—known for its refinement and balanced proportions—Beté carving often appears more forceful and less idealized. There is a tendency toward tension in posture and facial expression, which may relate to the figure’s protective or confrontational function. Some works from the Gahizapo area show a strong vertical emphasis and concentrated facial intensity, aligning them visually with other western Ivorian traditions such as Guéré (Wé), yet maintaining distinct proportional and facial conventions.
Objects collected in the Gahizapo region should therefore be understood within a localized network of ritual practice and carving lineages. Their stylistic features—expressive faces, frontal stance, and condensed bodily forms—serve not aesthetic naturalism but spiritual efficacy. Beté sculpture from this area exemplifies the broader western Ivorian emphasis on charged presence and the visual articulation of unseen forces.
Literature
Holas, Bohumil. L’image du monde Bété. Paris: Éditions Africaines, 1968.
Paulme, Denise. Une société de Côte d’Ivoire hier et aujourd’hui: les Bété. Paris: Mouton, 1962.
Dozon, Jean-Pierre. La société Bété. Paris: Karthala, 1985.
Herold, Erich. “Traditional Sculpture of the Bété Tribe, Ivory Coast.” Annals of the Náprstek Museum 10, no. 2 (1985): 15–42.
Rood, Armistead P. “Bété Masked Dance: A View from Within.” African Arts 3, no. 2 (1969): 30–37.
Leiris, Michel. Afrique noire: Arts anciens et contemporains de l’Afrique occidentale. Paris: Plon, 1937.
Bourgeois, Claude. Sculptures de Côte d’Ivoire: Région des Kru. Paris: Arts et Métiers Graphiques, 1966.
Taylor, Julie. Art of the Beté, Senufo, and Wé of Côte d’Ivoire. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1984.
CAB32866
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