一个木质雕塑 - Fon - 多哥 (沒有保留價)





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來自多哥的木雕,屬於豐族的雕塑,附帶底座,品相一般。
賣家描述
In Fon and related Ewe–Gbe Vodun contexts of southern Benin and Togo, sculptural objects commonly referred to in Western scholarship as bocio (also spelled botchio, bochio) are not representational artworks but activated ritual bodies. Within this framework, figures in which the face is deliberately damaged, effaced, or ritually “sacrificed,” and subsequently covered in white kaolin, belong to a broader logic of transformation in which the surface of the body becomes a site of controlled de-personalization and spiritual reprogramming rather than portraiture or likeness. Incl stand.
White kaolin, widely used across Vodun ritual systems, is not merely a pigment but a charged substance associated with liminality, purification, and contact with the realm of the dead or the invisible. When applied over a sculpted face, it can function as a visual and symbolic erasure of individuality, effectively suspending the figure between human identity and spiritual agency. In cases where the facial features are physically altered or removed before being coated, this act intensifies the transition from “image” to “instrument.” The face, normally the primary locus of social recognition, is neutralized so that the object may operate as a vessel for protective, coercive, or mediating forces rather than as a depiction of a person.
Ethnographic and museum-based documentation of Fon bocio consistently emphasizes this “counter-aesthetic” principle: power is generated not through idealized form but through disruption, accumulation, binding, and material intervention. The application of kaolin, combined with facial alteration, can thus be read as part of a broader ritual grammar in which visibility is strategically managed. What appears as mutilation or obscuration in a Western visual frame corresponds, within Vodun logic, to activation, sealing, or spiritual insulation of the object.
Objects of this kind are often situated in protective or juridical contexts—at thresholds, shrines, or domestic compounds—where they mediate between human actors and forces understood to govern misfortune, illness, or social conflict. The altered face, rather than signaling destruction, marks the figure as no longer belonging to ordinary social identity, but to a domain of operational efficacy within Vodun practice.
References
Blier, Suzanne Preston: African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Petridis, Constantine (ed.): Art and Oracle: African Art and Ritual Power. Cleveland Museum of Art, 1998.
Hahner-Herzog, Iris; Zehntner, Ute (eds.): Vodun: Kunst und Religion in Westafrika. Museum der Kulturen Basel, 2011.
Maupoil, Bernard: La géomancie à l’ancienne Côte des Esclaves. Institut d’Ethnologie, 1943.
Garrard, Timothy F.: African Goldweights. British Museum Press, 1989.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
賣家的故事
In Fon and related Ewe–Gbe Vodun contexts of southern Benin and Togo, sculptural objects commonly referred to in Western scholarship as bocio (also spelled botchio, bochio) are not representational artworks but activated ritual bodies. Within this framework, figures in which the face is deliberately damaged, effaced, or ritually “sacrificed,” and subsequently covered in white kaolin, belong to a broader logic of transformation in which the surface of the body becomes a site of controlled de-personalization and spiritual reprogramming rather than portraiture or likeness. Incl stand.
White kaolin, widely used across Vodun ritual systems, is not merely a pigment but a charged substance associated with liminality, purification, and contact with the realm of the dead or the invisible. When applied over a sculpted face, it can function as a visual and symbolic erasure of individuality, effectively suspending the figure between human identity and spiritual agency. In cases where the facial features are physically altered or removed before being coated, this act intensifies the transition from “image” to “instrument.” The face, normally the primary locus of social recognition, is neutralized so that the object may operate as a vessel for protective, coercive, or mediating forces rather than as a depiction of a person.
Ethnographic and museum-based documentation of Fon bocio consistently emphasizes this “counter-aesthetic” principle: power is generated not through idealized form but through disruption, accumulation, binding, and material intervention. The application of kaolin, combined with facial alteration, can thus be read as part of a broader ritual grammar in which visibility is strategically managed. What appears as mutilation or obscuration in a Western visual frame corresponds, within Vodun logic, to activation, sealing, or spiritual insulation of the object.
Objects of this kind are often situated in protective or juridical contexts—at thresholds, shrines, or domestic compounds—where they mediate between human actors and forces understood to govern misfortune, illness, or social conflict. The altered face, rather than signaling destruction, marks the figure as no longer belonging to ordinary social identity, but to a domain of operational efficacy within Vodun practice.
References
Blier, Suzanne Preston: African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power. University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Petridis, Constantine (ed.): Art and Oracle: African Art and Ritual Power. Cleveland Museum of Art, 1998.
Hahner-Herzog, Iris; Zehntner, Ute (eds.): Vodun: Kunst und Religion in Westafrika. Museum der Kulturen Basel, 2011.
Maupoil, Bernard: La géomancie à l’ancienne Côte des Esclaves. Institut d’Ethnologie, 1943.
Garrard, Timothy F.: African Goldweights. British Museum Press, 1989.
This information is created by AI and based on published ethnographic and art-historical sources.
賣家的故事
詳細資料
Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers
- Unternehmen:
- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
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- Wolfgang Jaenicke
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- Jaenicke Njoya GmbH
Klausenerplatz 7
14059 Berlin
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- +493033951033
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- w.jaenicke@jaenicke-njoya.com
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- DE241193499
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