This attractive piece is a Chiwara
(Ciwara, Chi-Wara, Tji-Wara) headdress
made by the Bambara/Bamana group of
Mali. It is an unusually charming and
entertaining example. It was originally
attached to a basketware base, and worn
with a raffia costume and danced in
order to pray for a bountiful harvest.
It sits on an elongated wood base with
its legs flexed, attached to a
simplified, elongated body with a raised
posterior kinked tail. The neck is
cylindrical, columnar and vertical, and
is bound with metal strips. The head is
very long and superiorly concave, with a
long snout and open mouth. It has long,
pinnate ears with piercings along the
inferior edges that were probably used
for attaching raffia, textiles etc. The
ears are dwarfed by long, curved horns
that jut out posteriorly, with a curve
towards the tips; unusually, they are
extensively decorated with cross
hatching designs. Minor details are
present in the forms of metal studwork
eyes and incised decoration on the face.
The wood is unpainted, but is well-
patinated with age and usage.
The Bambara/Bamana are one of the
largest groups in Mali (about 2.5
million) and lives in a savannah
grassland area that contrasts strongly
with the Dogon heartland. Their
linguistic heritage indicates that they
are part of the Mande group, although
their origins go back perhaps as far as
1500 BC in the present-day Sahara. They
gave rise to the Bozo, who founded
Djenne in an area subsequently overrun
by the Soninke Mande (<1100 AD). Their
last descended empire dissolved in the
1600s, and many Mande speakers spread
out along the Nigeria River Basin. The
Bamana empire arose from these remnant
populations in around 1740. The height
of its imperial strength was reached in
the 1780s under the rule of Ngolo
Diarra, who expanded their territory
considerably.
Chiwara headcrests are the greatest
achievement of the Bamana people, in
terms of conceptualization, composition
and abstraction. They were controlled
and danced by the Chi-Wara-Ton society,
which is – rarely for the Bamana – a
society of both men and women who are
charged with blessing the harvest. The
name “chiwara” means “laboring wild
animal” and refers to a half-man, half
antelope that was born of Mousso Koroni
(a sky goddess) and an earth spirit in
the form of a cobra. Chiwara then taught
the Bamana how to farm, and is
worshipped accordingly. The headcrests
are designed to represent the roan
antelope, in varying degrees of
abstraction. There are various styles,
simplified into vertical, horizontal and
abstract: these refer to the general
orientation of the head and “horns”: of
the antelope. The only commonality
between representations is the pair of
high horns, a head, and a zig-zag motif
that is believed to represent the
passage of the sun from east to west.
They are also gendered: the presence of
a baby antelope and straight horns
indicates that the latter is female,
while male versions have bent horns and
a phallus.
The shape of the body is designed to
evoke the aardvark (who burrows into the
soil as a good farmer should), the high
horns resemble millet stalks, the penis
of male figures usually touches the
earth and thus symbolizes fertility, the
baby on the back of the female
represents Chiwara’s carrying of humans
in order to teach them, and the ensemble
is worn by a dancer who also wears a
large costume made from raffia stalks
that symbolize flowing water and good
harvests. They are danced in male-female
pairs to combine their fertility to best
advantage. The dancers interact in a
very specific way, the female fanning
the male as he dances, in order to
spread his power through the community.
The male then acts like an antelope –
scratching at the earth etc – before
being shown the appropriate way to farm
land.
Different areas, carvers and workshops
may produce widely variable final
results that run the full gamut from
relatively naturalistic to completely
unrecognizable as anything connected
with an antelope. Major regional
variations include the Bougouni/Northern
Style (abstracted multi-figural), the
Bamako/Northern Style (specific
horizontal style), the Segu/Northern
Style (derived vertical style with cut-
out triangular body motif) and the
Sikasso style (with a thin, delicate,
vertical form with a blunt, almost human
face).
This piece is technically carved in the
Horizontal/Bamako/Northern region piece,
as evidenced by the low body, flat horns
and detailing. However, it is also a
truly superb example of one of Africa’s
greatest indigenous art forms and a
great addition to any collection or
sophisticated domestic setting.