編號 103830582

已出售
一个木质雕塑 - Akuaba - 迦納  (沒有保留價)
最終出價
€ 37
沒有保留價
4 週前

一个木质雕塑 - Akuaba - 迦納 (沒有保留價)

An Akuaba fertility sculpture from Ghana, collected in the Kumasi region, belongs to one of the most widely recognized forms of ritual woodcarving associated with the Akan cultural sphere. Typically carved in wood with a highly abstracted, disc-shaped head, a cylindrical or columnar body, and simplified limbs, the Akuaba figure is less a portrait than a condensed visual system of symbolic values relating to fertility, protection, and social continuity. Its formal reduction is not an aesthetic simplification in the modern sense but rather an intentional abstraction aligned with ritual efficacy. Within its original functional and ritual context, the Akuaba figure is most closely associated with female fertility and the desire for healthy childbirth. Historically, it was carried or cared for by women who sought to conceive or ensure the well-being of a pregnancy. After ritual consultation, often mediated by a spiritual specialist, the figure would be “treated” as a surrogate child: fed, bathed, and sometimes adorned. In this sense, the object operates within a relational ontology in which agency is distributed across human and non-human actors, and where material forms participate directly in reproductive and spiritual processes. The Kumasi region, as a historical and political centre of the Asante state, provides an important cultural context for understanding the Akuaba’s production and circulation. While similar forms exist across broader Akan-speaking areas, Asante workshop traditions in and around Kumasi are particularly noted for the refinement of proportion, surface treatment, and the codification of the characteristic flat, circular head. The form is often interpreted as referencing ideals of beauty and moral order, rather than individual identity, with the enlarged head understood as a locus of spiritual and intellectual force. In museum and archival contexts, Akuaba figures are frequently recontextualised as ethnographic or art historical objects, detached from their ritual biographies. Their meanings, however, remain layered and context-dependent, shaped by both their original use-life and subsequent collecting histories. The Jaenicke-Njoya Archive records several such objects collected in the Kumasi region, documenting their transformation from active ritual instruments into curated artefacts within institutional frameworks. These archival traces are significant for reconstructing provenance and for understanding how knowledge about such objects has been mediated through colonial and postcolonial collecting practices. The Akuaba figure thus occupies a complex position between sculpture, ritual instrument, and archival object. Its interpretation requires attention not only to form and iconography but also to embodied practices of care, belief, and social aspiration that once animated it within Akan communities. This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description. Reference list Jaenicke-Njoya Archive MAZ09762 McLeod, M. D. (1981). The Asante. London: British Museum Publications. Rattray, R. S. (1923). Ashanti. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Cole, H. M., & Ross, D. H. (1977). The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: UCLA Museum of Cultural History. Vogel, S. (1997). Earth and Other Worlds: African Art at the Museum for African Art. New York: The Museum for African Art.

編號 103830582

已出售
一个木质雕塑 - Akuaba - 迦納  (沒有保留價)

一个木质雕塑 - Akuaba - 迦納 (沒有保留價)

An Akuaba fertility sculpture from Ghana, collected in the Kumasi region, belongs to one of the most widely recognized forms of ritual woodcarving associated with the Akan cultural sphere. Typically carved in wood with a highly abstracted, disc-shaped head, a cylindrical or columnar body, and simplified limbs, the Akuaba figure is less a portrait than a condensed visual system of symbolic values relating to fertility, protection, and social continuity. Its formal reduction is not an aesthetic simplification in the modern sense but rather an intentional abstraction aligned with ritual efficacy.

Within its original functional and ritual context, the Akuaba figure is most closely associated with female fertility and the desire for healthy childbirth. Historically, it was carried or cared for by women who sought to conceive or ensure the well-being of a pregnancy. After ritual consultation, often mediated by a spiritual specialist, the figure would be “treated” as a surrogate child: fed, bathed, and sometimes adorned. In this sense, the object operates within a relational ontology in which agency is distributed across human and non-human actors, and where material forms participate directly in reproductive and spiritual processes.

The Kumasi region, as a historical and political centre of the Asante state, provides an important cultural context for understanding the Akuaba’s production and circulation. While similar forms exist across broader Akan-speaking areas, Asante workshop traditions in and around Kumasi are particularly noted for the refinement of proportion, surface treatment, and the codification of the characteristic flat, circular head. The form is often interpreted as referencing ideals of beauty and moral order, rather than individual identity, with the enlarged head understood as a locus of spiritual and intellectual force.

In museum and archival contexts, Akuaba figures are frequently recontextualised as ethnographic or art historical objects, detached from their ritual biographies. Their meanings, however, remain layered and context-dependent, shaped by both their original use-life and subsequent collecting histories. The Jaenicke-Njoya Archive records several such objects collected in the Kumasi region, documenting their transformation from active ritual instruments into curated artefacts within institutional frameworks. These archival traces are significant for reconstructing provenance and for understanding how knowledge about such objects has been mediated through colonial and postcolonial collecting practices.

The Akuaba figure thus occupies a complex position between sculpture, ritual instrument, and archival object. Its interpretation requires attention not only to form and iconography but also to embodied practices of care, belief, and social aspiration that once animated it within Akan communities.

This description is made with AI. Despite careful individual review, the use of Artificial Intelligence may result in errors or inaccuracies in the description.

Reference list

Jaenicke-Njoya Archive MAZ09762

McLeod, M. D. (1981). The Asante. London: British Museum Publications.

Rattray, R. S. (1923). Ashanti. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Cole, H. M., & Ross, D. H. (1977). The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: UCLA Museum of Cultural History.

Vogel, S. (1997). Earth and Other Worlds: African Art at the Museum for African Art. New York: The Museum for African Art.

最終出價
€ 37
沒有保留價
Surya Rutten
專家
估價  € 150 - € 200

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