編號 102410351

已出售
一个木制面具 - Senufo - 象牙海岸  (沒有保留價)
最終出價
€ 374
沒有保留價
10 週前

一个木制面具 - Senufo - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)

This Senufo mask is carved in the northern savanna zone of Côte d’Ivoire, in the vicinity of Tingréla, this Senufo mask belongs to a sculptural tradition in which form is inseparable from social authority and spiritual efficacy. Among the Senufo, visual culture is profoundly shaped by the Poro society, an initiatory system that structures male education, moral conduct, and the transmission of esoteric knowledge. Within this framework, masks are not autonomous artworks but activated presences—material interfaces through which unseen forces are summoned, disciplined, and made legible in public ritual. The designation “warrior mask,” while common in the language of collections and the art market, is not an indigenous category. Rather, it indexes a cluster of visual and performative qualities associated with protection, vigilance, and controlled aggression. Such works often emphasize tensile geometry and an economy of line: apertures puncture the surface, edges assert directional force, and the composition resists the closed harmony typical of more canonical Senufo face masks. In some examples, figural or zoomorphic elements—avian beaks, horn-like projections, or feline allusions—are integrated into an openwork structure. These features do not describe literal animals; instead, they condense attributes of perception, speed, and potency, translating them into a visual syntax of guardianship. In contrast to the celebrated Kpelie mask, whose serene, ovoid face and refined surface articulate ideals of balance and social beauty, so-called “warrior” forms operate at the threshold of order and danger. They resonate more closely, in affect if not in exact morphology, with the domain of the Kponyugo mask—a composite, often fearsome helmet mask associated with social control and the neutralization of disruptive forces. Yet the present type typically departs from the volumetric enclosure of the helmet mask, favoring planar extension or lattice-like construction. This structural openness may be read as a conceptual device: the mask does not merely conceal or transform the wearer, but stages a passage—an oscillation between visibility and concealment, between the human performer and the immanent spirit. Regional attribution to Tingréla situates the work within a northern Senufo milieu where Poro institutions have historically maintained strong continuity. While precise localization is often complicated by patterns of circulation and later collection histories, stylistic features—particularly the handling of negative space and the articulation of peripheral projections—support an origin within this broader cultural geography. The patina, where preserved, further indexes a history of use: accumulations of oil, pigment, and environmental wear that testify to repeated activation in performance rather than static display. Crucially, the efficacy of such a mask is not exhausted by its visible form. In performance, it would have been integrated into a larger assemblage—costume, movement, sound—through which the mask’s latent force is realized. The dancer’s body, obscured and extended, becomes a vehicle for a presence that is at once ancestral and regulatory. In this sense, the “warrior” is not an individual combatant but a principle: the maintenance of social equilibrium through the calibrated deployment of power. Seen in a museum context, the mask invites a double reading. On one hand, it exemplifies a sophisticated sculptural intelligence, in which abstraction and figuration are held in productive tension. On the other, it bears witness to a system of knowledge in which objects act—where carving, performance, and initiation converge to produce forms that are at once aesthetic, ethical, and cosmological. Informant Bakari Bouaflé CAB39005

編號 102410351

已出售
一个木制面具 - Senufo - 象牙海岸  (沒有保留價)

一个木制面具 - Senufo - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)

This Senufo mask is carved in the northern savanna zone of Côte d’Ivoire, in the vicinity of Tingréla, this Senufo mask belongs to a sculptural tradition in which form is inseparable from social authority and spiritual efficacy. Among the Senufo, visual culture is profoundly shaped by the Poro society, an initiatory system that structures male education, moral conduct, and the transmission of esoteric knowledge. Within this framework, masks are not autonomous artworks but activated presences—material interfaces through which unseen forces are summoned, disciplined, and made legible in public ritual.

The designation “warrior mask,” while common in the language of collections and the art market, is not an indigenous category. Rather, it indexes a cluster of visual and performative qualities associated with protection, vigilance, and controlled aggression. Such works often emphasize tensile geometry and an economy of line: apertures puncture the surface, edges assert directional force, and the composition resists the closed harmony typical of more canonical Senufo face masks. In some examples, figural or zoomorphic elements—avian beaks, horn-like projections, or feline allusions—are integrated into an openwork structure. These features do not describe literal animals; instead, they condense attributes of perception, speed, and potency, translating them into a visual syntax of guardianship.

In contrast to the celebrated Kpelie mask, whose serene, ovoid face and refined surface articulate ideals of balance and social beauty, so-called “warrior” forms operate at the threshold of order and danger. They resonate more closely, in affect if not in exact morphology, with the domain of the Kponyugo mask—a composite, often fearsome helmet mask associated with social control and the neutralization of disruptive forces. Yet the present type typically departs from the volumetric enclosure of the helmet mask, favoring planar extension or lattice-like construction. This structural openness may be read as a conceptual device: the mask does not merely conceal or transform the wearer, but stages a passage—an oscillation between visibility and concealment, between the human performer and the immanent spirit.

Regional attribution to Tingréla situates the work within a northern Senufo milieu where Poro institutions have historically maintained strong continuity. While precise localization is often complicated by patterns of circulation and later collection histories, stylistic features—particularly the handling of negative space and the articulation of peripheral projections—support an origin within this broader cultural geography. The patina, where preserved, further indexes a history of use: accumulations of oil, pigment, and environmental wear that testify to repeated activation in performance rather than static display.

Crucially, the efficacy of such a mask is not exhausted by its visible form. In performance, it would have been integrated into a larger assemblage—costume, movement, sound—through which the mask’s latent force is realized. The dancer’s body, obscured and extended, becomes a vehicle for a presence that is at once ancestral and regulatory. In this sense, the “warrior” is not an individual combatant but a principle: the maintenance of social equilibrium through the calibrated deployment of power.

Seen in a museum context, the mask invites a double reading. On one hand, it exemplifies a sophisticated sculptural intelligence, in which abstraction and figuration are held in productive tension. On the other, it bears witness to a system of knowledge in which objects act—where carving, performance, and initiation converge to produce forms that are at once aesthetic, ethical, and cosmological.

Informant Bakari Bouaflé

CAB39005

最終出價
€ 374
沒有保留價
Dimitri André
專家
估價  € 550 - € 700

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