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Baule Masks : Baule Wooden Mask of a Ram
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Baule Wooden Mask of a Ram - PF.5895
Origin: Ivory Coast
Circa: 20
th
Century AD
Dimensions:
15" (38.1cm) high
x 12.5" (31.8cm) wide
Collection: African
Medium: Wood
Additional Information: closet AF10
$5,000.00
Location: United States
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Description |
The ram, and in specific the ram’s horns, have
been a potent symbol in world mythology
throughout the ages. Ancient Egyptians
worshipped multiple gods with ram’s heads
including Khnum and the composite deity Amen-
Ra. The Ancient Phoenician deity Ba’al, who was
adopted by the Greeks as Zeus, was often
depicted crowned with the horns of the ram.
Throughout time, spanning across divergent
cultures and civilizations, the ram has been a
traditional symbol of male fertility and the
hearth. The power and majesty of this beast has
been long revered by mankind, and this was
especially true of the Baule tribe who identified
the ram and their tribal symbol.
Masks are commonly used among many African
cultures to facilitate the bond between the
people and their ancestors and divinities. Masks
instill social order, and can bring forth prosperity
as well as misfortune. They are used in
ceremonies of rites of passage and are usually
accompanied by elaborate music and
choreography. Among the Baule, who are
believed to over a million people, there are two
general forms of masks: animal and human.
This
mask is of a type that would have been worn and
danced with during the Goli festival related to
the harvest and to funerals of important tribal
leaders. The wearer would have been covered in
an elaborate costume hiding his body beneath.
Thus the illusion proffered by the mask would be
completed. The mask seeks not to disguise the
wearer but to transform him into a medium
through which the spirit world could
communicate with the villages using the
language of rhythm and gesture. The Baule
judged their art by strict criteria including a
smooth finish, the clarity of line, and a slight
inherent asymmetry; clearly this mask would
have been heralded as a masterpiece by the
Baule themselves.
- (PF.5895)
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