編號 102415929

無法使用
一尊陶土雕塑 - Nok - 尼日利亞
競投已結束
6 週前

一尊陶土雕塑 - Nok - 尼日利亞

A fragmentary male terracotta in the style of Nok, Nigeria, collected in the Kaduna region, of columnar shape, incl. wooden stand. Condition report: The terracotta sculpture presented here belongs to the corpus commonly associated with the Nok culture of central Nigeria, a tradition whose material legacy has reached us almost exclusively in fragmentary form. The condition of this work must be understood within that broader archaeological reality. A vertical crack is visible along the lower section of the figure, extending upward from the base. In addition, the neck area shows evidence of an earlier restoration that appears to have been carried out without professional conservation standards. The join is structurally stable but remains detectable upon close inspection. These interventions, while not uncommon in the history of Nok terracottas, should be considered part of the object’s modern biography rather than its original fabrication. It is important to note that intact Nok sculptures are exceedingly rare. The majority of known examples have survived only in fragments. In numerous documented cases, heads and torsos were found at some distance from one another, sometimes in entirely separate depositional contexts. This recurring pattern has led scholars to suggest that the sculptures may have undergone a form of intentional ritual “burial” or decommissioning in antiquity. Rather than accidental breakage alone, their fragmentation may reflect a culturally meaningful act—an intentional separation marking the end of a ritual cycle or the transformation of the figure’s spiritual status s. Breunig, Peter, and Rupp, Nicole. “New Research on the Nok Culture of Central Nigeria.” Journal of African Archaeology 4, no. 2 (2006): 237–255. Presents revised dating and contextual findings based on systematic excavations. Within this perspective, fractures and separations are not merely damages but traces of historical processes embedded in the life of the object. The present sculpture, with its visible crack and repaired neck, thus participates in a condition that is characteristic of the Nok corpus as a whole. Its material vulnerabilities echo the archaeological circumstances under which most Nok terracottas have come to light: dispersed, weathered, and bearing the marks of both ancient ritual handling and modern recovery. The structural imperfections do not diminish the sculpture’s historical and aesthetic significance. On the contrary, they underscore its authenticity as an artifact shaped by time, ritual practice, burial, rediscovery, and restoration. In the case of Nok terracottas, fragmentation is not the exception but the norm—an intrinsic aspect of their transmission from antiquity to the present. The Nok culture of central Nigeria, particularly associated with the Kaduna region, represents one of the earliest known sculptural traditions in sub-Saharan Africa. Flourishing roughly between 1500 BCE and 300 CE, the Nok are best known for their remarkable terracotta figures, which stand among the most technically and conceptually sophisticated early artworks on the African continent. First brought to scholarly attention in the 1920s through tin mining operations near the village of Nok in present-day Kaduna State, these sculptures were recovered from secondary deposits, often displaced from their original archaeological contexts. Despite this early disruption, subsequent excavations in the Kaduna region have confirmed that the terracottas formed part of a widespread cultural horizon extending across central Nigeria. The region’s iron-rich soils and evidence of early iron smelting suggest a society of considerable technological complexity. Nok sculptures are characterized by their distinctive formal vocabulary. Human figures are typically rendered with elongated proportions, elaborate coiffures, and highly stylized facial features. The eyes are often triangular or almond-shaped, pierced with drilled holes that once allowed for venting during firing; the pupils may be indicated by circular perforations. Mouths are usually open, sometimes revealing teeth, and ears are prominently modeled. These formal conventions create a striking combination of abstraction and expressive presence. The surfaces are frequently adorned with incised geometric patterns, which may represent scarification, jewelry, or textile ornamentation. The corpus includes standing and seated human figures, fragmentary heads, and occasional representations of animals. Some figures appear to depict individuals in positions of authority or ritual significance, indicated by complex hairstyles, necklaces, armlets, or staffs. Others show signs of disease or physical anomaly, suggesting an attentiveness to embodied experience rather than an exclusively idealized aesthetic. The scale of surviving works ranges from small fragments to near life-size figures, though many pieces are incomplete due to their archaeological history and later looting. Technically, Nok terracottas demonstrate advanced ceramic knowledge. They were hand-built using coiling techniques and fired at relatively high temperatures for earthenware. The hollow construction of the figures indicates both sculptural planning and an understanding of kiln dynamics. Such expertise aligns with the evidence for early iron production in the region, situating the Nok within a broader technological milieu. The precise function of Nok sculptures remains debated. Hypotheses have ranged from ancestral commemoration and ritual display to protective or funerary purposes. Because most examples were found outside secure stratigraphic contexts, definitive conclusions are elusive. Nevertheless, the recurrence of certain iconographic features across a wide geographic area suggests shared symbolic systems and established conventions of representation. In art historical terms, Nok sculpture challenges earlier narratives that situated the origins of complex figural art in sub-Saharan Africa at a much later date. The Kaduna-region finds demonstrate that, by the first millennium BCE, communities in central Nigeria had developed a mature and distinctive sculptural tradition. Although separated by centuries from later artistic centers such as Ife or Benin, the Nok terracottas affirm the deep antiquity of figurative expression in West Africa. Today, Nok sculptures are dispersed across international museum collections, often fragmentary and divorced from their original settings. Yet even in isolation, their poised silhouettes, rhythmic surface patterning, and alert, open gazes continue to convey the presence of an early society whose artistic achievements remain foundational to the understanding of African antiquity. Galerie Wolfgang Jaenicke seeks to reconcile what may appear as antagonistic positions by operating with the highest degree of transparency. The NCMM is familiar with our website and our guiding principle that Nigeria’s interest in its cultural heritage must always take precedence. For more than twenty-five years, we have worked with artifacts from across West Africa. Should any of these countries express a wish to have objects included in their national cultural institutions, we are committed to respecting that request. In the past, we have transferred objects from our own collections to the National Museum in Mali on multiple occasions, whenever these works were of particular interest to the institution. There is a very good ARTE film at the moment about the Nok culture. Informant Amadou Dogo TL Analysis Kotalla 1890 years +/- 15,1 % CAB35271

編號 102415929

無法使用
一尊陶土雕塑 - Nok - 尼日利亞

一尊陶土雕塑 - Nok - 尼日利亞

A fragmentary male terracotta in the style of Nok, Nigeria, collected in the Kaduna region, of columnar shape, incl. wooden stand.

Condition report: The terracotta sculpture presented here belongs to the corpus commonly associated with the Nok culture of central Nigeria, a tradition whose material legacy has reached us almost exclusively in fragmentary form. The condition of this work must be understood within that broader archaeological reality.

A vertical crack is visible along the lower section of the figure, extending upward from the base. In addition, the neck area shows evidence of an earlier restoration that appears to have been carried out without professional conservation standards. The join is structurally stable but remains detectable upon close inspection. These interventions, while not uncommon in the history of Nok terracottas, should be considered part of the object’s modern biography rather than its original fabrication.

It is important to note that intact Nok sculptures are exceedingly rare. The majority of known examples have survived only in fragments. In numerous documented cases, heads and torsos were found at some distance from one another, sometimes in entirely separate depositional contexts. This recurring pattern has led scholars to suggest that the sculptures may have undergone a form of intentional ritual “burial” or decommissioning in antiquity. Rather than accidental breakage alone, their fragmentation may reflect a culturally meaningful act—an intentional separation marking the end of a ritual cycle or the transformation of the figure’s spiritual status

s. Breunig, Peter, and Rupp, Nicole. “New Research on the Nok Culture of Central Nigeria.” Journal of African Archaeology 4, no. 2 (2006): 237–255.
Presents revised dating and contextual findings based on systematic excavations.

Within this perspective, fractures and separations are not merely damages but traces of historical processes embedded in the life of the object. The present sculpture, with its visible crack and repaired neck, thus participates in a condition that is characteristic of the Nok corpus as a whole. Its material vulnerabilities echo the archaeological circumstances under which most Nok terracottas have come to light: dispersed, weathered, and bearing the marks of both ancient ritual handling and modern recovery.

The structural imperfections do not diminish the sculpture’s historical and aesthetic significance. On the contrary, they underscore its authenticity as an artifact shaped by time, ritual practice, burial, rediscovery, and restoration. In the case of Nok terracottas, fragmentation is not the exception but the norm—an intrinsic aspect of their transmission from antiquity to the present.

The Nok culture of central Nigeria, particularly associated with the Kaduna region, represents one of the earliest known sculptural traditions in sub-Saharan Africa. Flourishing roughly between 1500 BCE and 300 CE, the Nok are best known for their remarkable terracotta figures, which stand among the most technically and conceptually sophisticated early artworks on the African continent.

First brought to scholarly attention in the 1920s through tin mining operations near the village of Nok in present-day Kaduna State, these sculptures were recovered from secondary deposits, often displaced from their original archaeological contexts. Despite this early disruption, subsequent excavations in the Kaduna region have confirmed that the terracottas formed part of a widespread cultural horizon extending across central Nigeria. The region’s iron-rich soils and evidence of early iron smelting suggest a society of considerable technological complexity.

Nok sculptures are characterized by their distinctive formal vocabulary. Human figures are typically rendered with elongated proportions, elaborate coiffures, and highly stylized facial features. The eyes are often triangular or almond-shaped, pierced with drilled holes that once allowed for venting during firing; the pupils may be indicated by circular perforations. Mouths are usually open, sometimes revealing teeth, and ears are prominently modeled. These formal conventions create a striking combination of abstraction and expressive presence. The surfaces are frequently adorned with incised geometric patterns, which may represent scarification, jewelry, or textile ornamentation.

The corpus includes standing and seated human figures, fragmentary heads, and occasional representations of animals. Some figures appear to depict individuals in positions of authority or ritual significance, indicated by complex hairstyles, necklaces, armlets, or staffs. Others show signs of disease or physical anomaly, suggesting an attentiveness to embodied experience rather than an exclusively idealized aesthetic. The scale of surviving works ranges from small fragments to near life-size figures, though many pieces are incomplete due to their archaeological history and later looting.

Technically, Nok terracottas demonstrate advanced ceramic knowledge. They were hand-built using coiling techniques and fired at relatively high temperatures for earthenware. The hollow construction of the figures indicates both sculptural planning and an understanding of kiln dynamics. Such expertise aligns with the evidence for early iron production in the region, situating the Nok within a broader technological milieu.

The precise function of Nok sculptures remains debated. Hypotheses have ranged from ancestral commemoration and ritual display to protective or funerary purposes. Because most examples were found outside secure stratigraphic contexts, definitive conclusions are elusive. Nevertheless, the recurrence of certain iconographic features across a wide geographic area suggests shared symbolic systems and established conventions of representation.

In art historical terms, Nok sculpture challenges earlier narratives that situated the origins of complex figural art in sub-Saharan Africa at a much later date. The Kaduna-region finds demonstrate that, by the first millennium BCE, communities in central Nigeria had developed a mature and distinctive sculptural tradition. Although separated by centuries from later artistic centers such as Ife or Benin, the Nok terracottas affirm the deep antiquity of figurative expression in West Africa.

Today, Nok sculptures are dispersed across international museum collections, often fragmentary and divorced from their original settings. Yet even in isolation, their poised silhouettes, rhythmic surface patterning, and alert, open gazes continue to convey the presence of an early society whose artistic achievements remain foundational to the understanding of African antiquity.

Galerie Wolfgang Jaenicke seeks to reconcile what may appear as antagonistic positions by operating with the highest degree of transparency. The NCMM is familiar with our website and our guiding principle that Nigeria’s interest in its cultural heritage must always take precedence. For more than twenty-five years, we have worked with artifacts from across West Africa. Should any of these countries express a wish to have objects included in their national cultural institutions, we are committed to respecting that request. In the past, we have transferred objects from our own collections to the National Museum in Mali on multiple occasions, whenever these works were of particular interest to the institution.

There is a very good ARTE film at the moment about the Nok culture.

Informant Amadou Dogo

TL Analysis Kotalla 1890 years +/- 15,1 %

CAB35271

競投已結束
Dimitri André
專家
估價  € 4,200 - € 4,700

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