NEW ACQUISITIONS SUMMER 2021
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NEW ACQUISITIONS SUMMER 2021
ART AND ANTIQUES FROM AFRICA, OCEANIA AND THE AMERICAS
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ART AND ANTIQUES FROM AFRICA, OCEANIA AND THE AMERICAS
www.jacarandatribal.com dori@jacarandatribal.com T +1 646-251-8528 New York City, NY 10025
© 2021, Jacaranda LLC Published July, 2021 PRICES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST
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NEW ACQUISITIONS SUMMER 2021
We are pleased to present our latest online exhibition, New Acquisitions – Summer 2021. Comprising 21 objects from Africa and Oceania, the
While we will not be exhibiting at Pacours this year, we will be visiting Paris during the show and hope to see many of you again after a difficult 18 months. As always, feel free to
exhibition includes both figurative and non-figurative
email or call us with any questions on objects in our catalog
items made from a wide range of materials including shell,
or on our website. And whenever you are next in New York,
bronze, wood and copper. Our selection includes an archaic
please be sure to arrange a visit to our home gallery.
Maori figurative gable Tekoteko, a rare Marquesan female figure, a classic Kongo Nkisi, a particularly beautiful Kikuyu
Dori & Daniel Rootenberg
initiation shield Ndome and a stunning and rare dance wand
new york city, july 2021
from the Tiwi peoples of Northern Australia.
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RELIQUARY GUARDIAN FIGURE, MBULU NGULU KOTA, GABON
Until the middle of the 20th century, clans across equatorial Africa preserved the memories and spirits of revered ancestors through reliquaries that held the skulls of the renowned and distinguished. Elders of the widespread ancestor cult (most
Late 19th or early 20th century
widely known as bwiti or bwete among Kota peoples in
Wood, copper alloy
areas now belonging to Gabon and the Republic of Congo)
Height: 20 in
commissioned the creation of abstract figural sculptures (mbulu ngulu) that stood atop baskets or bark containers
PROVENANCE
that housed these precious relics. Produced in a variety of
Merton Simpson Gallery, New York, 1960s
styles, they were affixed to the lid of the reliquary container
William Brill (1918–2003), New York
or lashed to a relic bundle placed inside. On a superficial
To his son by inheritance
level they acted as the public face of familial altars, but they
Sotheby’s New York, November 2006
served a much more complex and important role as agents of
Private New York collection
ancestral power in communal rites and ritual performances, channeling support and protection to the community.
PUBLISHED
This reliquary figure shows many classic characteristics
Selections from the William W. Brill Collection of African Art,
of the tradition, with full, sweeping forms and a majestic
Milwaukee Public Museum, Wisconsin, 1969:28, #42.
presence. Its wide and curving shapes are balanced masterfully
Raoul Lehuard ‘La collection William Brill,’ in Arts d’Afrique Noire,
by sharp angles and rectilinear elements, all cohering in
no.26, Arnouville, 1978:18.
a beautiful geometric symmetry and poise. In the center
Alain & Francoise Chaffin L’Art Kota. Les figures de reliquaire, Meudon,
of the convex, oval face plate rest the domed and staring
1979:225, #126.
eyes so quintessential to the mbulu ngulu, transfixing the
Louis Perrois ‘Arts du Gabon, Arts d’Afrique Noire. Les Plastiques du
viewer with their gaze. Beneath the face with its impressive
Bassin de l’Ogooue,’ Arts d’Afrique Noire, Arnouville, 1979:181, #184.
headdress of lobed and semicircular forms, a ridged neck terminates in a flexed, diamond-shaped structure, rough-
EXHIBITED
hewn and deeply worn from its binding in the relic bundle.
Selections from the William W. Brill Collection of African Art,
The copper bands and sheets applied to the wooden body
Milwaukee Public Museum, Wisconsin, May 5–August 31, 1969.
of the figure were rare materials in the artist’s time, acquired
Selections from the William W. Brill Collection of African Art, St. Paul
through trade with Europeans and prized for their luster.
Art Center, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 23 – December 21, 1969.
Beginning in the 1870s, Kota reliquary figures were
Selections from the William W. Brill Collection of African Art, Tweed Art
among the earliest African sculptures to be acquired by
Gallery, University of Minnesota, Minnesota, January 14 – February
European naturalists and explorers, among them Paul Du
22, 1970.
Chaillu, Alfred Marche, Oscar Lenz, and Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza.
r e l i q ua r y g ua r d i a n f i g u r e , m b u lu n g u lu
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r e l i q ua r y g ua r d i a n f i g u r e , m b u lu n g u lu
r e l i q ua r y g ua r d i a n f i g u r e , m b u lu n g u lu
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r e l i q ua r y g ua r d i a n f i g u r e , m b u lu n g u lu
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BABOON MASK, N’GON KOUN BAMANA, MALI Early 20th century Wood, sacrificial material Height: 22 in PROVENANCE
Private Midwest USA collection Sotheby’s New York, November 2004 Private New York collection
Virtually all aspects of the lives of Bamana men are governed and influenced by a group of six initiation
reborn into the community as fully formed men. The handsome n’gon koun presented here is of classic,
societies collectively known as Dyow (or Jow). To be
elongated form, with a domed head tapering smoothly
considered a complete and well-instructed individual,
down to a narrow chin. A sharp brow overhangs pierced,
a man must pass through the learning and rites of all
rectilinear eyes set closely upon the narrow ridge of the
six societies, each of which is associated with its own
nose, which reaches dramatically down nearly to the base of
emblematic mask. The final level in the Dyow sequence,
the mask. The earthy, rust-colored surface shows a heavily
which has as its mask that of the baboon (n’gon koun), is
encrusted patina of ritual material, and holes for attachment
known as Kore. Members of this society have acquired the
are found pierced along the perimeter.
requisite level of ancestral and traditional knowledge to be
baboon mask, n’gon koun
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baboon mask, n’gon koun
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baboon mask, n’gon koun
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INITIATION SHIELD, NDOME KIKUYU, KENYA First half of 20th century Wood, pigments Height: 26 ½ in; Width: 19 in PROVENANCE
Private South African collection
This leaf-shaped dance shield is known as ndome and is
the shield dance, several boys are circumcised at once at a
used in boys’ coming-of-age ceremonies among the Kikuyu
special ritual location, grouped by age. Each set of boys is
people of central Kenya. When worn, the left arm is slipped
given a group name and its members treat each other as
through the ring at the base of the shield and the shield
brothers for life, and fight together in battle.
itself stands high above the head of the dancer. The ndome
Characteristic features of the ndome are a series of
symbolizes the warrior status the boy is about to acquire
serrated grooves in the form of a crescent on the reverse
through the rites of initiation, and the polychrome designs
side and a small, eye-shaped hole in the center through
carved in relief on either side relate to those with which he
which the dancer may peer. Patterns on the obverse
will decorate his future war shield, signalling his local origin
side traditionally followed the shape of an eye or eyelid.
and affiliation to a particular initiation cohort.
Craftsmen called muumburo or the initiates themselves
The adulthood initiations of both sexes are important
scraped, redesigned, and repainted these shields, which the
and separate affairs, but both involve circumcision and the
initiates customarily inherited as treasured heirlooms from
use of shields. For boys, the ceremony is called irua and
older male members of their family. If there was more than
takes place between the ages of fifteen and eighteen. After
one boy in a family, a new shield would be commissioned.
i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
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i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
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i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
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i n i t i at i o n s h i e l d , n d o m e
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STAFF WITH HUMAN HEAD MOSSI, BURKINA FASO Late 19th or early 20th century Wood Height: 25 in PROVENANCE
Merton Simpson Gallery, New York Sotheby’s, November 1997 Private USA collection
A masterful reinterpretation of the human form, both
from the center of the head in representation of a braided
playful and sculpturally stunning, marks this magnificent
coiffure, the shape of which is echoed in the large, curved
Mossi staff. Sharing the geometricized appearance of
ears. The banded neck, swelling slightly, leads down into the
some Mossi doll figures, the head that crowns this staff is
body of the shaft, at the juncture of which a small pair of
block-like and imposing, the proportions of its elements
symbolic breasts stand forth.
given over to a powerful abstraction. Beneath the sharply
The frontal perspective of this staff gives little indication
indented eye notch a precise ridge descends diagonally back
of the composition’s true form, setting up a surprising
to the base of the jaw, bisecting the front and rear sections
moment of transformation as one’s vantage point shifts to
of the face into stepped planes. A parabolic crest rises
reveal the broad and expertly carved bust.
s ta f f w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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s ta f f w i t h h u m a n h e a d
s ta f f w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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s ta f f w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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LONG-HANDLED FIGHTING STAFF, TEWHATEWHA MAORI, NEW ZEALAND 19th century Wood Height: 58 in PROVENANCE
Robert Hales, UK
In contrast to Maori artists’ mesmerizingly intricate
While tewhatewha typically have straight handles, this
representational carvings, the weapons they fashioned show
example shows an extremely rare and possibly unique
at times a sleeker, more minimal design. This long-handled
angled form. At the vertex of the angle is found a carved
fighting staff, or tewhatewha (pronounced tefa tefa), is a
scroll pattern representing the head of an ancestor, with
prime example, featuring a slender, tapering haft and a
genealogical significance personal to the owner of this
blade-like head akin to an abstracted axe, showing a blend
weapon. The lowermost portion of the haft forms a tongue
of sharp angles and rounded edges.
protruding between the upper and lower jaws of the
Held in two hands, the tewhatewha would be used to deliver lightning thrusts with the flat top edge of the head, and it doubled as a signaling device, communicating a
ancestral mouth, which represent different hemispheres of knowledge, combining the heavenly and the physical. Like many Maori weapons, this tewhatewha is a status
leader’s battle commands to his warrior group. Decoration
object, holding importance both martial and spiritual. For
on traditional tewhatewha could be quite spare, as in this
the Maori, the longer and more storied a weapon’s history
example, or might take the form of detailed designs carved
grew, the more mana, or spiritual force, it would accrue.
in relief. A bundle of feathers (connected through the holes
Honored weapons were given names and were passed down
at the lower edge of the head) was commonly attached,
as heirlooms, growing in mana and prestige with each
serving to distract the gaze of the enemy and sometimes
generation.
absorb a measure of blood.
lo n g - h a n d l e d f i g h t i n g s ta f f , t e w h at e w h a
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lo n g - h a n d l e d f i g h t i n g s ta f f , t e w h at e w h a
lo n g - h a n d l e d f i g h t i n g s ta f f , t e w h at e w h a
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lo n g - h a n d l e d f i g h t i n g s ta f f , t e w h at e w h a
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THREE WEST AFRICAN BRONZES SEATED FIGURE Dogon, Mali or Burkina Faso Late 19th or early 20th century Bronze Height: 3 in
Bronze, brass, and iron have been worked in a vast range of forms across Africa for centuries. Alongside large pieces such as currency objects, weapons, and bodily ornaments, the forges of Africa produced a wide variety of small works in metal, including figurines. Some bronze miniatures were used as goldweights and played a utilitarian role in trade, while others were used as talismans. Of this latter group, one of the foremost producers were the Kotoko, who participated in this tradition with a number of other cultures in and around the Sahara Desert.
PROVENANCE
Gary L. Schultze Collection, New York
Kotoko artists, living in the vicinity of Lake Chad, used the lost-wax technique to cast small figurines that were kept as personal amulets. Worn around an owner’s neck or
EQUESTRIAN FIGURE, KOTOKO
carried by hand or in a small pouch, they safeguarded their
Kotoko, Hadjer-Lamis or Chari-Baguirmi Regions, Chad, or Far
owners against outward threats as well as inner perils, such
North Region, Cameroon
as anxiety and mental illness. Many of these amulets depict
Late 19th or early 20th century
horse riders and archers, and are known as putchu guinadj.
Bronze
These images are deeply rooted in a regional history of
Height: 2 ¾ in
horse-mounted warfare which greatly affected the Kotoko, and their potency as magical and mythological symbols
PROVENANCE
allow them to quell spirits which cause weakness of soul,
Private USA collection
sadness, fear, and alienation. They were often hung from necklaces and bracelets along with other items of protection
STANDING MALE FIGURE Senufo, Côte d’Ivoire or Mali Late 19th or early 20th century Bronze Height: 2 ¾ in
and propitiation, such as cowrie shells, leather gri-gri amulets, and bells. The figurines presented here show a range of the figural styles of the Saharan region. All were crafted using a similar method of shaping and application to produce simplified, abstracted forms. A Dogon example depicts a seated man, while a standing Senufo figurine shows slender, wavy
PROVENANCE
Gary L. Schultze Collection, New York
arms and legs, a crested coiffure, and applied knobs at the pectorals, navel, and pubis. The sole putchu guinadj in the group features a thick-bodied horse with rider holding its reins, sword slung along one flank.
three west african bronzes
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three west african bronzes
three west african bronzes
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three west african bronzes
three west african bronzes
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three west african bronzes
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GABLE FIGURE, TEKOTEKO MAORI, NEW ZEALAND 18th century or earlier
A potent aura of strength marks this archaic tekoteko figure,
Wood
which represents the main progenitor of a tribe. It is a
Height: 29 in
central element of iconography in the whare whakairo, a carved tribal meeting house located in the marae (ritual
PROVENANCE
ground) of a Maori village. Tekoteko are found either at
Simon Spierer, Geneva (1926–2005)
the highest point at the front apex of the roof or at the
Adrian Schlag, Brussels
front central post of the meeting house. They can also be
Daniel Hourdé, Paris
incorporated into the richly carved poutokomanawa, or
Private USA collection
main central ridge support post. The flattened, frontal composition of this tekoteko shows
EXHIBITED
a classic Maori body form carved in the archaic style with a
Art Basel 2017 – Galerie Meyer
vigorous, wide-legged stance and three-fingered hands held at the belly. The large head has been organized to focus on
PUBLISHED
the sharply slanted eyes, wide nose, and gaping mouth with
Ein Wald der Skulpturen. Sammlung Simon Spierer, Landesmuseum
forcefully extended tongue. Over these rests a prominent,
Darmstadt, 2004.
swelling brow with a four-pointed crown and central knob.
Adrian Schlag, Tribal Art Classics II. Paris, 2006: 54–55.
The feet of the figure rest upon a vertical shaft, the front of
Galerie Meyer, exhibition catalog for ART Basel 2017, p 14.
which is carved with seven downward-pointing, openwork hooks. Remarkably rare in this type of figure is the openwork carving with which the eyes, nose, and mouth have been executed. This is a very atypical effect seen in only two other known tekoteko (ex Pierre Verité collection, Paris; Volkerkunde Museum, Berlin).
g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
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g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
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g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
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g a b l e f i g u r e , t e k ot e k o
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FEMALE FIGURE SONGYE, DR CONGO 19th century Wood Height: 6 ¾ in PROVENANCE
Gaston de Havenon, New York Hubert Goldet Collection, Paris Alan Brandt, New York, 1993 Private USA collection PUBLISHED
African Art in the de Havenon Collection, Museum of African Art, Washington, DC, 1971, fig. 234
Songye artists are renowned for their masks and statuary,
rudimentary form, are placed on either side of a protruding
which are highly stylized and often striking in their
umbilicus. A circular base terminates the figure at the waist.
sculptural power. Representations of males and females
With its blend of soft, sloping surfaces and rigid, geometric
abound in Songye tradition, each having a characteristic
shapes, the face is deeply expressive, suggesting both sorrow
style and individuality. These carvings were largely used
and wisdom. The numerous ridges of the neck symbolize
within secret societies as power objects, channeling
health, wealth, and fertility.
spiritual forces to protect or assist the owner or the greater community. This female figure shows a confidently modeled head, classic elongated neck, gentle shoulders, and simplified
The crown of the head holds a magical charge (boanga) made by a ritual practitioner. A paste composed of potent ingredients, boanga were placed in hollows in the torsos or heads of power figures to endow them with magical efficacy.
torso with arms carved in relief. The hands, sketched in
female figure
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female figure
female figure
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female figure
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FEMALE FIGURE KANAK, NEW CALEDONIA 19th century Wood Height: 11 ¾ in PROVENANCE
Wayne Heathcote, Brussels, 2005 Private USA collection
Shaped with robust and vigorous volumes, this female
It is unclear what exact purpose figures such as this one
Kanak figure communicates a strong sense of fleshy
served, but a similar example in the Museum der Kulturen,
physicality. With a benevolent expression, its oblong visage
Basel, was identified by Fritz Sarasin as one associated
sits atop a broad neck, with wide-set eyes, abstracted ears,
with the bringing of rain: ‘It is probable that most of these
and a classic Kanak nose of great width and protuberance.
figures were associated with ancestor worship. They, and in
Narrow arms flank a cylindrical torso, bending at the elbow
fact all of the sculptures of New Caledonia, were carved by
to place small hands upon a projecting umbilicus. From its
artists who had been selected not only because they were
broad hips descend thick, exaggerated thighs and calves,
skilled craftsmen, but because they had a relationship to the
standing well apart to frame and emphasize the pubis.
supernatural spirits they represented in their works.’
female figure
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female figure
female figure
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female figure
female figure
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female figure
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LIME SPATULA SOLOMON ISLANDS Late 19th century Wood Height: 15 in PROVENANCE
William Ockleford Oldman Collection (with original Oldman tag) (1879–1949) Abe Rosman and Paula Rubel Collection Private New York collection
The chewing of betel nut (Areca catechu) has been practiced
from a container to be added to the betel packet. The
across much of Asia and the Pacific for thousands of years.
handles and finials of spatulas, which are sometimes quite
Wrapped in betel leaves (Piper betle) and mixed with lime,
large, are often carved with elaborate figural or abstract
slices of the nut are chewed for the mild psychoactive
designs distinctive to the maker’s region.
and stimulating effect the mixture produces. A frequent
The sweeping and sinuous shape of this Solomon Islands
and ubiquitous indulgence, many cultures have placed
spatula is a reference to the qauata, a light, leaf-shaped
a significant degree of importance upon the chewing of
parrying shield that warriors used to deflect arrows and
betel nut, and have ascribed to it certain metaphorical
spears. Gracefully swelling and tapering along its length,
and spiritual meanings. In the Solomon Islands, betel nut
its curved form flows elegantly down to a spearhead-like
plays a role in gift-giving ceremonies such as betrothal and
point, which the betel preparer would slip into a cylindrical
propitiatory offerings to spirits.
bamboo container to withdraw a measure of lime. A narrow,
Melanesian artists applied a great deal of artistic energy
central ridge with a diving frigate bird design is carved in
to the production of betel nut paraphernalia, the most
relief down the middle of the form, again in direct homage
iconic of which is the lime spatula. This implement is used
to the aesthetics of full-sized parrying shields.
to extract a dose of lime (made from burnt shells or coral)
The spatula retains its original Oldman tag.
l i m e s pat u l a
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l i m e s pat u l a
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STOPPER WITH HUMAN HEAD YANZI OR YAKA, DR CONGO Late 19th or early 20th century Wood, fiber Height: 4 ½ in PROVENANCE
Private USA collection
This fine anthropomorphic stopper shows the design
with the rich, black patina – are a somewhat surrealistic,
hallmarks of those in the rather limited corpus of Yanzi art,
otherworldly aura and a striking sculptural power for an
taking the shape of an abstracted human bust with a tall,
object of such diminutive size.
helmet-like head, angling down toward the chin, atop an
Stoppers such as these were used to close the medicinal
elongated, flared neck. Panels of incisions in a grid pattern
gourds of diviners. A small piece of fiber cord, which would
are found on either side of the head and on the lower half
have originally kept the stopper attached to the gourd,
of the neck. The overall effect of these qualities – together
remains knotted around the neck.
s to p p e r w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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s to p p e r w i t h h u m a n h e a d
s to p p e r w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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s to p p e r w i t h h u m a n h e a d
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DANCE WAND TIWI, AUSTRALIA Late 19th or early 20th century Wood, resin, pigment Height: 30 in PROVENANCE
Sotheby’s Sydney, Aboriginal Art, July 28-29, 2003: pgs. 74–75 and back cover, lot 141. Private USA collection
The multilayered, feathered shape of this double-sided
pattern of red, yellow, and white dots adorns the black
dance wand echoes and elaborates upon the barbed form of
surface of the wand, softening its sharp, pointed edges and
Tiwi ceremonial spears. Topped with a carved and painted
lending an organic visual effect to the tightly symmetrical
human face with pierced eyes, it suggests an abstract human
and precisely carved composition.
figure. At the center of the form are found two ovular, eyelike holes, seemingly fixed in an everlasting gaze. A dense
Remains of an old label (illegible) are found on the handle.
d a n c e wa n d
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d a n c e wa n d
d a n c e wa n d
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d a n c e wa n d
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POWER FIGURE, NKISI KONGO, DR CONGO 19th century
Renowned for their arresting sculptural power, Kongo
Wood, cloth, mirror, feathers, metal, leather, pigment
power figures represent one of the most iconic art forms
Height: 13 ¾ in
of central Africa. Created collaboratively by an artist and a ritual specialist (nganga), they are conceived to house
PROVENANCE
potent mystical forces and bear stern witness to critical
René Buthaud (1886–1986), Bordeaux, France, collection formed
community affairs.
between 1920–1950
Nkisi (pl. minsiki) is both the name of a spirit and a figure
Galerie Olivier Le Corneur (1906–1991) and Jean Roudillon
that can be made to contain it. The nganga empowers the
(1923–2020), Paris
figure by embedding animal and plant substances into it,
Alfred Müller, Saint Gratien, France
often in a cavity on the stomach, which is covered by a
Clayre and Jay Haft, USA
mirror. Thus charged, the nkisi is able to identify and attack
Christie’s New York, May 1993
a sorcerer who may be causing harm to certain individuals
James Willis (1934–2019), San Francisco, 1995
or the community at large; as well, minkisi were used to
Private USA collection
resolve conflicts among tribe members. Many minkisi are pierced with numerous nails and shards of metal, each
PUBLISHED
of which attests to a resolution between members of the
Raoul Lehuard ‘Art Bakongo. Les Centres de Style’ Arts d’Afrique
community or an effort to combat evil. While most minkisi
noire 2, Arnouville, 1989: 245 : fig. D 6-1-3
brandish a dagger, indicating their role as avenger, some stand with hands akimbo, suggesting their role as Supreme Being. The nkisi offered here shows a large abdominal cavity, multicolored body, and a number of attached accoutrements, including a prominent feather crown (possibly replaced) and a small cloth bundle slung across the torso. Wear and age have left the surfaces of the figure richly textured. Planted on its large feet and animated with a wide-eyed, vital expression, the figure holds high its right hand, which once carried a blade.
power figure, nkisi
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power figure, nkisi
power figure, nkisi
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power figure, nkisi
power figure, nkisi
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power figure, nkisi
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ZOOMORPHIC HEADREST NGONI, MALAWI 19th century Wood, glass beads Length: 14 ¼ in; Height: 6 ¾ in PROVENANCE
Wilhelm Pohlig, Germany Helmut Pohlig (1913–1980), Germany Udo and Waltraud Horstmann Collection, Zug, Switzerland PUBLISHED
Claus D. Chowanetz & Günter Rudolf, ‘Durch Bielefelder Wohnung weht ein Hauch von Steppe und Busch’ in Westfalen Blatt, Bielefeld, no. 208, September 7, 1968
Supported on four thick legs, this powerfully composed
the concave top surface.
headrest takes the form of a quadrupedal animal, or perhaps
This headrest belonged to Wilhelm Pohlig, a sanitary
two such animals fused and opposed at the midsection. The
sergeant serving in the Guardian Forces of General Paul
angular, wedge-shaped head/tail elements are echoed by the
von Lettow-Vorbeck in German East Africa. Pohlig’s son,
belly, which hangs between the trunk-like legs, tapering into
Helmut, was six years old when the colony collapsed after
a prominent, triangular umbilicus. Relief carvings are found
several years of resistance. After his father’s death, Helmut
on both sides of the abdomen in the form of tiered sawtooth
and his mother were the last citizens of the empire who left
motifs, and chevrons in relief decorate the head, which also
the colony, having been able to embark on the last ship from
features glass bead eyes. A small, diamond-shaped opening
Dar es Salaam through the personal intervention of General
is pierced in both sides of the belly, just below the edge of
Lettow-Vorbeck.
zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
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zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
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zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
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zo o m o r p h i c h e a d r e s t
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SHELL TRUMPET PACIFIC REGION Late 19th century Conch shell Height: 11 ½ in PROVENANCE
Private New York collection
Conch shell trumpets are among the ancient symbols of
ritual, conch trumpets were also used for signaling.
a vast range of cultures across the globe, from the ancient
This fine trumpet features beautiful natural patterning
Mediterranean to South Asia, and from Africa to Central
and coloration of pinks, browns, and warm greys. While
America. The peoples of the South Pacific also included
the mouth hole is found at the side in this trumpet, other
conch trumpets in their traditions. To Polynesians of
examples are pierced at the tip and fitted with a mouthpiece.
Mangara in the Cook Islands, the penetrating blast of the
An old collection number (#49) is adhered to the inside
conch shell represents the voice of Rongo, the god who gave
wall of the shell’s main opening, the rim of which has a
fire to mankind. In Tonga, conch shells (kele’a) may play
chipped section.
in ensembles of two to five parts. In addition to music and
shell trumpet
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shell trumpet
shell trumpet
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shell trumpet
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MINIATURE SPOON TSONGA, SOUTH AFRICA Late 19th or early 20th century Wood Height: 4 ½ in PROVENANCE
Merton Simpson Gallery, New York
Tsonga carvers are recognized for their exquisite work with the spoon form, producing elegant designs with remarkable technique and great imagination. Some of their most complex compositions involve linked chain elements, an approach suggested in the design of this miniature spoon. The two links forming the handle of the spoon are fused at the center point, supporting at opposite ends a thick, discshaped finial and a circular bowl. Both echo the roundness and weight of the other, providing a strong balance and a suggestion of symmetry to the piece. Like many of the great abstract carvings from the region, this spoon has an unmistakable figurative element.
m i n i at u r e s p o o n
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m i n i at u r e s p o o n
m i n i at u r e s p o o n
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m i n i at u r e s p o o n
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SPEAR THROWER ORNAMENT IATMUL OR SEPIK, PAPUA NEW GUINEA Early 20th century Wood Height: 9 ½ in PROVENANCE
Private collection, Pennsylvania, USA
A vital part of a hunter’s gear in Papua New Guinea was the spear thrower, a medium-length shaft with a grip and lip at the end, which was used to propel spears or javelins with greater force. Holding the spear parallel to the thrower, the hunter would use an ornamental thumb guard, attached to the center of the thrower, to keep the spear in place and guide its aim. The ornaments were often carved quite elaborately, taking the shape of humans and animals. This example suggests an abstract human face, the eye design of which may symbolize a parrot’s tongue.
spear thrower ornament
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spear thrower ornament
spear thrower ornament
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spear thrower ornament
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HIGH-RANKING WOMAN’S NECK RING, LEPETU SOTHO, SOUTH AFRICA Mid-19th century Brass Height: 5 ½ in; Width: 6 ½ in PROVENANCE
Jeremy Sabine, South Africa (acquired from the owner, whose grandfather had found it on his farm in the Limpopo region, South Africa)
A soft luster and simple, stunning grace mark this Sotho
of extraction of copper and zinc, the components of brass,
neck ring. Known as lepetu, such rings are status necklaces
in the present-day KwaZulu-Natal, or adjacent Cape and
worn by married women. The width of the ring directly
Free State, and thus it would have been imported as an alloy,
correlates to the prestige of the wearer, and the largest in
brought to the shores of southern Africa by Portuguese
width were worn by the wives of chiefs. They are quite
merchants. Brass probably reached the smiths of the South
rare, with only some twenty-four other known examples in
Sotho people through traders travelling from the Cape. The
public collections.
local brass-workers would have fashioned this collar into its
In the pre-colonial period, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries, brass was a prestige commodity
distinctive form by hammering it flat once it had been cast in a mould.
among the peoples of southeast Africa. There is no evidence
high-ranking woman’s neck ring, lepe tu
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high-ranking woman’s neck ring, lepe tu
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ZITHER WITH HUMAN HEAD, LIGOMBO GOGO, KAGURU, OR ZARAMO, TANZANIA Late 19th or early 20th century Wood, string Height: 35 in PROVENANCE
Merton Simpson Gallery, New York Private USA collection
Trough zithers are a group of African stringed instruments
The slender string board shows raised edges around its
or chordophones whose members resemble wooden bowls,
entire silhouette and is flared at both ends. At the top of
pans, platters, or shallow gutters with strings stretched
the zither is a finial carved in the form of a small head
across them. The instruments may be quiet when played,
with elongated neck and open mouth, perhaps portraying
depending upon the shape of the bowl or string-holder.
a singer. In conjunction with the flared end of the string
Sound is often amplified with the addition of a resonator,
board, the visual effect is that of a full bust with shoulders.
commonly fashioned from a large gourd.
A small piece of string remains attached at the bottom end
This is an example of a six-string zither. The original
of the zither.
resonator is missing, as is typical with most early examples.
zither with human head, ligombo
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zither with human head, ligombo
zither with human head, ligombo
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zither with human head, ligombo