Über das Lot Chargen- 226
Titel : Mende Helmet Mask
Größe : Height: 15 1/4 in (38.7 cm)Herkunft : Collected in situ by Charles Miller III, 1970s
Literature : Daniel Mato and Charles Miller III, Sande: Masks and Statues from Liberia and Sierra Leone, Amsterdam, 1990, pp. 54-55African Arts, Autumn 1999, Vol. XXXII, No. 3, p. 6
Anmerkung : For a recently sold mask by the same hand see Sotheby's New York, May 16, 2008, lot 108. For another previously in the collection of Carlo Monzino, Castagnola, see Vogel (1986: 36, cat. 28).
An important Mende Mask by the Master of Nguabu
The Mende term ndoli jowei means expert in dance and is the term used for the individual who performs with the principal mask of the women's society known as sande. This type of mask is more frequently, and less accurately, known as Sande or Bundu mask. In 1935, the German ethnographer Eberl-Elber photographed and described a ndoli jowei mask for the sande society in the Mende region of Sierra Leone. Unfortunately, Eberl-Elber did not publish the specific location in which he saw the mask. Thirty-seven years later, Ruth Phillips photographed another mask in the town of Nguabu in Kaiyamba chiefdom, Moyamba district, in the far western area Mende region of Sierra Leone. Every ndoli jowei mask has a personal name known in the community but rarely recorded by researchers or collectors. Phillips identifies the mask from Nguabu as Kaki Bobi (Brassiere). The mask is strikingly similar to the one photographed by Eberl-Elber as well as the one from the Charles Miller Collection. The facial features including the ears, nose and mouth are virtually identical, but it is the treatment of the eyes in which the eyebrows are indicated by arcs of incised lines that is especially noteworthy. The neck rings and the flanged rim to which the costume is attached are also treated in an identical manner. Unfortunately, the name of the carver is not known. Undoubtedly he was commissioned by the sande in many different towns and it is not certain where he actually lived. Nevertheless, he was clearly a prolific and masterful carver. Consequently, at least until his name or the name of the town in which he lived can be identified, this author has chosen to identify him as the Master of Nguabu. The corpus of works by this atrist numbers well over two dozen pieces including two examples that entered the British Museum collections in 1943. Others at the Fowler Museum originally came from the Welcome Collection and were probably collected at about the same period. Masks by the Nguabu Master were still being used well into the 1970s. It seems likely that this artist was active during the 1920s to the 1940s. William C. SiegmannBrooklyn, March 2008, revised in March 2011
Sotheby's, Auktionator, New York, US
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Verkaufstitel : African, Oceanic and Pre-Columbian Art Including Property from the Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation
Verkaufsdatum : 13/05/2011
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Auktionsreferenz : Live Sale