編號 101664771

一个木质雕塑 - Baule - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)
編號 101664771

一个木质雕塑 - Baule - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)
A Baule sculpture, Ivory Coast, collected in the region of Dimbokro, seated on an Ashanti stool, wearing a fabric loincloth, the arms close to the body in open work, the hands touching the abdomen, the breast tapering, the oval head with with fine fascial features, scarification patterns all over the sculpture; blackened Patina with signs of ritual use.
The sculpture of the Baule people in the Dimbokro region of central Côte d’Ivoire occupies a distinguished position within the broader corpus of Akan-speaking artistic traditions in West Africa. Dimbokro lies within the historic Baule cultural heartland, and the works associated with this area demonstrate both the formal refinement and the spiritual complexity for which Baule carving is widely recognized. While local variation exists from village to village, sculpture from the Dimbokro zone reflects a coherent aesthetic system grounded in religious practice, social identity, and ideals of moral and physical beauty.
Baule sculpture is primarily executed in wood, typically carved from a single block and finished with careful smoothing and polishing. Surfaces often acquire a deep, lustrous patina through ritual handling, libations, and the application of oils. The human figure predominates. These figures are neither portraits in a literal sense nor abstracted symbols detached from lived experience. Rather, they embody an idealized vision of personhood shaped by Baule concepts of spiritual equilibrium, fertility, dignity, and composure. Proportions are carefully calibrated: elongated necks, balanced shoulders, attenuated torsos, and firmly planted legs convey stability and poise. Faces are often oval, with high foreheads, narrow eyes set in lowered contemplation, and delicately modeled mouths. Scarification marks and elaborate coiffures are rendered with precision, indicating not only aesthetic preference but also social and cultural identity.
A central category of Baule sculpture consists of spirit-spouse figures, known as blolo bian (spirit husband) and blolo bia (spirit wife). These carvings materialize beings believed to reside in the otherworld, to whom individuals may be spiritually married. In the Dimbokro region, such figures display particular elegance of proportion and restraint of gesture. They were kept in private shrines, offered food or libations, and consulted in times of personal difficulty. Their physical perfection reflects the notion that the spirit world is an idealized counterpart to earthly existence. The refinement of carving underscores the moral and aesthetic standards associated with the invisible realm.
Divination figures and other ritual sculptures also form part of the regional corpus. Such works, sometimes grouped under the general term waka sona (“wood beings”), function as intermediaries between humans and spiritual forces. They may appear more compact or symbolically charged than spirit-spouse figures, yet they retain the characteristic Baule emphasis on composure and clarity of form. In some documented workshops near Dimbokro, early twentieth-century carvings reveal consistent stylistic features, suggesting localized master carvers whose influence extended across neighboring communities. These ateliers produced figures that balance structural clarity with subtle modeling, and that maintain a harmonious relationship between surface detail and overall silhouette.
The aesthetic of serenity so characteristic of Baule sculpture from Dimbokro should not be mistaken for passivity. The downcast eyes and calm expression signify interiority and spiritual focus. Beauty, in this context, is understood as an outward manifestation of inner moral balance. The polished surface and careful finish contribute not only to visual appeal but also to the efficacy of the object in ritual life. Sculpture was not conceived as autonomous art in a modern Western sense; rather, it functioned within a network of social obligations, religious practices, and personal devotions.
By the early twentieth century, Baule works from central Côte d’Ivoire, including those attributed to the Dimbokro area, entered European and American collections. They were admired for their formal harmony and technical mastery and played a role in shaping Western understandings of African art. Yet in their original context these sculptures were embedded in lived experience, activated through ritual, and sustained by belief. The Dimbokro corpus, therefore, stands not only as an aesthetic achievement but also as material testimony to a cosmology in which the visible and invisible worlds remain in continuous dialogue.
CAB34611
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