編號 103122838

已出售
一个木制面具 - Koumain - 象牙海岸  (沒有保留價)
最終出價
€ 153
2 週前

一个木制面具 - Koumain - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)

A rare, elegant Kouman mask with a goatee of animal hair and a cap of cowrie-shells, attributed to the western regions of Ivory Coast and reportedly collected around Touba belongs to a broader and highly stratified mask culture in which form, performance, and social function are inseparable. Although the designation “Kouman” is not among the most standardised ethnographic classifications in the literature compared to better-known stylistic corpora such as Dan, Guro, Baule, or Senufo masks, it appears in some cataloguing traditions as a localized or sub-stylistic attribution, often dependent on field collection histories rather than strictly fixed indigenous taxonomies. This already introduces one of its principal peculiarities: its identity is partly archival, shaped by collectors and museum documentation practices, rather than being fully stabilised as a universally recognised emic category. Incl stand. In formal terms, Kouman masks associated with the Touba region tend to be described through their compositional hybridity and their resistance to rigid stylistic codification. Where many Ivorian mask traditions are defined by relatively consistent formal grammars—such as the elongated elegance of Baule portrait masks or the zoomorphic dynamism of Senufo Poro-related ensembles—the Kouman designation is frequently linked to masks that combine multiple formal cues or that occupy transitional zones between stylistic regions. This hybridity is not accidental but reflects the historically dense cultural ecology of north-western Côte d’Ivoire, where mobility, trade routes, and interethnic ritual exchange have long produced overlapping aesthetic vocabularies. A further peculiarity lies in the mask’s possible ritual positioning. In many mask-bearing societies of Côte d’Ivoire, masks are not merely sculptural objects but activated agents within performative systems involving dance, music, secrecy associations, and moral regulation. Kouman-attributed masks are often interpreted within this general West African ontological framework, yet they are distinguished by a certain ambiguity in their documented ritual role. In some catalogues, they are linked to entertainment masquerades or transitional performance contexts rather than strictly initiatory institutions. This ambiguity itself is significant: it suggests that the mask may function as a mediating object between sacred and secular domains, or that its ritual meaning shifts depending on local community interpretation. Materiality also contributes to its distinctiveness. While many carved masks in the region are executed in highly standardized hardwoods with polychrome pigment systems, Kouman masks recorded from the Touba area are sometimes noted for more expressive carving strategies, including freer proportional handling and less rigid symmetry. The visual emphasis may lean toward affective immediacy—exaggerated eyes, intensified forehead volumes, or compressed facial planes—rather than canonical proportional harmony. Such traits have often been interpreted by collectors as “expressive freedom,” though from an anthropological perspective they may instead indicate localized aesthetic priorities that privilege performative legibility at a distance over sculptural refinement in isolation. The rarity of Kouman masks in museum and private collections is also tied to the politics of collection itself. Unlike more widely exported mask traditions from Côte d’Ivoire that became central to early twentieth-century European and American collecting networks, Kouman materials appear to have been documented in more episodic field contexts. This contributes to their relative scarcity in institutional archives and to the unevenness of scholarly attention. Their presence in catalogues is therefore often accompanied by gaps in provenance data, reinforcing their liminal status between well-classified ethnographic object and residual archival category. From a broader art-historical perspective, Kouman masks challenge the tendency to treat West African masquerade traditions as neatly bounded stylistic systems. Instead, they point toward a more fluid reality in which regional interaction zones generate hybrid forms that resist taxonomic closure. In this sense, their peculiarity is not merely formal but epistemological: they expose the limits of classification systems that depend on discrete ethnic attribution, and they foreground the role of collection history in shaping what is understood as stylistically coherent. Ultimately, a Kouman mask from the Touba region should be understood less as a fixed type and more as a situated object emerging from intersecting fields of ritual practice, regional exchange, and museum categorisation. Its rarity is not only a matter of numerical scarcity but also of interpretive instability, which makes it particularly significant for rethinking how West African masquerade objects are described, classified, and historicised. Reference list Imperato, Pascal James. African Art in Context: The Masquerades of West Africa. Smithsonian Institution Press. Phillips, Tom (ed.). Africa: The Art of a Continent. Prestel. Cole, Herbert M. & Ross, Doran H. The Arts of Ghana. UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. LaGamma, Alisa (ed.). The Essential Art of African Textiles and Masquerades. Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications. Vogel, Susan M. Art/Artifact: African Art in Anthropology Collections. Center for African Art. CAB44276

編號 103122838

已出售
一个木制面具 - Koumain - 象牙海岸  (沒有保留價)

一个木制面具 - Koumain - 象牙海岸 (沒有保留價)

A rare, elegant Kouman mask with a goatee of animal hair and a cap of cowrie-shells, attributed to the western regions of Ivory Coast and reportedly collected around Touba belongs to a broader and highly stratified mask culture in which form, performance, and social function are inseparable. Although the designation “Kouman” is not among the most standardised ethnographic classifications in the literature compared to better-known stylistic corpora such as Dan, Guro, Baule, or Senufo masks, it appears in some cataloguing traditions as a localized or sub-stylistic attribution, often dependent on field collection histories rather than strictly fixed indigenous taxonomies. This already introduces one of its principal peculiarities: its identity is partly archival, shaped by collectors and museum documentation practices, rather than being fully stabilised as a universally recognised emic category. Incl stand.

In formal terms, Kouman masks associated with the Touba region tend to be described through their compositional hybridity and their resistance to rigid stylistic codification. Where many Ivorian mask traditions are defined by relatively consistent formal grammars—such as the elongated elegance of Baule portrait masks or the zoomorphic dynamism of Senufo Poro-related ensembles—the Kouman designation is frequently linked to masks that combine multiple formal cues or that occupy transitional zones between stylistic regions. This hybridity is not accidental but reflects the historically dense cultural ecology of north-western Côte d’Ivoire, where mobility, trade routes, and interethnic ritual exchange have long produced overlapping aesthetic vocabularies.

A further peculiarity lies in the mask’s possible ritual positioning. In many mask-bearing societies of Côte d’Ivoire, masks are not merely sculptural objects but activated agents within performative systems involving dance, music, secrecy associations, and moral regulation. Kouman-attributed masks are often interpreted within this general West African ontological framework, yet they are distinguished by a certain ambiguity in their documented ritual role. In some catalogues, they are linked to entertainment masquerades or transitional performance contexts rather than strictly initiatory institutions. This ambiguity itself is significant: it suggests that the mask may function as a mediating object between sacred and secular domains, or that its ritual meaning shifts depending on local community interpretation.

Materiality also contributes to its distinctiveness. While many carved masks in the region are executed in highly standardized hardwoods with polychrome pigment systems, Kouman masks recorded from the Touba area are sometimes noted for more expressive carving strategies, including freer proportional handling and less rigid symmetry. The visual emphasis may lean toward affective immediacy—exaggerated eyes, intensified forehead volumes, or compressed facial planes—rather than canonical proportional harmony. Such traits have often been interpreted by collectors as “expressive freedom,” though from an anthropological perspective they may instead indicate localized aesthetic priorities that privilege performative legibility at a distance over sculptural refinement in isolation.

The rarity of Kouman masks in museum and private collections is also tied to the politics of collection itself. Unlike more widely exported mask traditions from Côte d’Ivoire that became central to early twentieth-century European and American collecting networks, Kouman materials appear to have been documented in more episodic field contexts. This contributes to their relative scarcity in institutional archives and to the unevenness of scholarly attention. Their presence in catalogues is therefore often accompanied by gaps in provenance data, reinforcing their liminal status between well-classified ethnographic object and residual archival category.

From a broader art-historical perspective, Kouman masks challenge the tendency to treat West African masquerade traditions as neatly bounded stylistic systems. Instead, they point toward a more fluid reality in which regional interaction zones generate hybrid forms that resist taxonomic closure. In this sense, their peculiarity is not merely formal but epistemological: they expose the limits of classification systems that depend on discrete ethnic attribution, and they foreground the role of collection history in shaping what is understood as stylistically coherent.

Ultimately, a Kouman mask from the Touba region should be understood less as a fixed type and more as a situated object emerging from intersecting fields of ritual practice, regional exchange, and museum categorisation. Its rarity is not only a matter of numerical scarcity but also of interpretive instability, which makes it particularly significant for rethinking how West African masquerade objects are described, classified, and historicised.

Reference list

Imperato, Pascal James. African Art in Context: The Masquerades of West Africa. Smithsonian Institution Press.

Phillips, Tom (ed.). Africa: The Art of a Continent. Prestel.

Cole, Herbert M. & Ross, Doran H. The Arts of Ghana. UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History.

LaGamma, Alisa (ed.). The Essential Art of African Textiles and Masquerades. Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications.

Vogel, Susan M. Art/Artifact: African Art in Anthropology Collections. Center for African Art.

CAB44276

最終出價
€ 153
Julien Gauthier
專家
估價  € 430 - € 500

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