一个陶土头像 - Djenne - 馬里 (沒有保留價)

06
18
小時
29
分鐘
58
目前出價
€ 16
沒有保留價
Julien Gauthier
專家
由Julien Gauthier精選

在歷史兵器、盔甲及非洲藝術領域擁有十年經驗。

估價  € 430 - € 500
另有27人對此物品感興趣
FR
€16
IT
€11
FR
€8

Catawiki買家保障

在您收到物品前,我們會妥善保管您的付款。查看詳情

Trustpilot評分 4.4 | 132471 則評論

Trustpilot獲得極佳評等。

賣家描述

This terracotta head-fragment from the Inland Niger Delta, attributed to the urban complex of Djenné-Jeno and reportedly collected in the region of Mopti in present-day Mali, exemplifies the formal and symbolic density characteristic of first-millennium sculptural traditions of the Middle Niger. The face is organized around a poised verticality: a slender, rectilinear nose descends toward full, carefully modeled lips, beneath which a small goatee introduces a note of individualized physiognomy. The eyes, rendered as pronounced, bulging orbs, project an alert, almost otherworldly presence. At the temples, incised scarification patterns articulate identity and status, indexing practices of corporeal inscription that carried social, aesthetic, and possibly therapeutic meanings. In absence of laboratory tests, the age and attribution of this piece stay subject to authentication.

Most striking is the cranial surface, animated by numerous serpentine forms that appear to coil across the skull. Whether read as literal ophidian imagery or as an abstracted coiffure inflected by mythic associations, these elements invite interpretation within broader West African cosmologies in which serpents mediate between terrestrial and aquatic realms, vitality and regeneration. Their proliferation across the head may signal protective potency, ancestral affiliation, or the containment of dangerous knowledge. The fragmentary state intensifies this ambiguity, foregrounding the head as a locus of perception, speech, and spiritual agency.

Technically, the work demonstrates refined control of hand-built terracotta, with subtle modulation of planes and incisive detailing. Its aesthetic economy aligns with other Djenné-region finds while retaining a singular iconographic program. As such, the fragment contributes to ongoing debates about workshop practices, regional styles, and the circulation of ideas within the Inland Niger Delta’s early urban networks.

Selected literature
McIntosh, Roderick J., and Susan Keech McIntosh. “Cities Without Citadels: Understanding Urban Origins Along the Middle Niger.”
Insoll, Timothy. “The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
Bedaux, Rogier, et al. “The Inland Niger Delta: Archaeology and Environment.”
LaGamma, Alisa, ed. “Sahel: Art and Empires on the Shores of the Sahara.”

#afrohemian26

賣家的故事

由Google翻譯翻譯

This terracotta head-fragment from the Inland Niger Delta, attributed to the urban complex of Djenné-Jeno and reportedly collected in the region of Mopti in present-day Mali, exemplifies the formal and symbolic density characteristic of first-millennium sculptural traditions of the Middle Niger. The face is organized around a poised verticality: a slender, rectilinear nose descends toward full, carefully modeled lips, beneath which a small goatee introduces a note of individualized physiognomy. The eyes, rendered as pronounced, bulging orbs, project an alert, almost otherworldly presence. At the temples, incised scarification patterns articulate identity and status, indexing practices of corporeal inscription that carried social, aesthetic, and possibly therapeutic meanings. In absence of laboratory tests, the age and attribution of this piece stay subject to authentication.

Most striking is the cranial surface, animated by numerous serpentine forms that appear to coil across the skull. Whether read as literal ophidian imagery or as an abstracted coiffure inflected by mythic associations, these elements invite interpretation within broader West African cosmologies in which serpents mediate between terrestrial and aquatic realms, vitality and regeneration. Their proliferation across the head may signal protective potency, ancestral affiliation, or the containment of dangerous knowledge. The fragmentary state intensifies this ambiguity, foregrounding the head as a locus of perception, speech, and spiritual agency.

Technically, the work demonstrates refined control of hand-built terracotta, with subtle modulation of planes and incisive detailing. Its aesthetic economy aligns with other Djenné-region finds while retaining a singular iconographic program. As such, the fragment contributes to ongoing debates about workshop practices, regional styles, and the circulation of ideas within the Inland Niger Delta’s early urban networks.

Selected literature
McIntosh, Roderick J., and Susan Keech McIntosh. “Cities Without Citadels: Understanding Urban Origins Along the Middle Niger.”
Insoll, Timothy. “The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
Bedaux, Rogier, et al. “The Inland Niger Delta: Archaeology and Environment.”
LaGamma, Alisa, ed. “Sahel: Art and Empires on the Shores of the Sahara.”

#afrohemian26

賣家的故事

由Google翻譯翻譯

詳細資料

族裔/文化
Djenne
原產國
馬里
物料
Terracotta
Sold with stand
不是
狀況
狀況一般
藝術品標題
A terracotta head
Height
18 cm
重量
1,3 kg
德國已驗證
6201
已售物品
99,69%
protop

Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers

Unternehmen:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Repräsentant:
Wolfgang Jaenicke
Adresse:
Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
GERMANY
Telefonnummer:
+493033951033
Email:
w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
USt-IdNr.:
DE241193499

AGB

AGB des Verkäufers. Mit einem Gebot auf dieses Los akzeptieren Sie ebenfalls die AGB des Verkäufers.

Widerrufsbelehrung

  • Frist: 14 Tage sowie gemäß den hier angegebenen Bedingungen
  • Rücksendkosten: Käufer trägt die unmittelbaren Kosten der Rücksendung der Ware
  • Vollständige Widerrufsbelehrung

類似物品

中的精彩好物

非洲與部落藝術