Zemanek-Münster

Beautiful female mask "gu", before 1910

Côte d'Ivoire, Guro
sold EUR 15,000
Provenance
Tajan, Paris, 8 November 1996, lot 163
Roy Stacy, Washington D.C., USA
Size
H: 25 cm
H: 9.8 inch

Description

wood, softly luminous black patina, narrow elongated face with a concave vaulted heart-shaped facial plane, narrow slit eyes, small lancet-shaped mouth, grooved zigzag-hairline, three old collection labels with faded inscription and handwritten collection number “4” on the backside, slighly dam., crack backside (upper rim), abrasion of paint, base.
“Gu” is always carved “uanya iri nya”, i. e. according to the image of “a beautiful woman”. She is the wife of the mask-being “zamble” and as such she must always follow her husband, i.e. appear after him in a masquerade. “Gu” masks and their cult always belong to the same families that own “zamble”. A conical basket, attached to the mask is put over the dancers back of the head, thus helping the dancer to fix the mask in front of the face. The dancer wears a netlike costume, abundant grass fibre bunches, a womans cloth mainly in blue and an antelope pelt.

Text by John Warne Monroe:
http://www.tribal-art-auktion.de/en/news-and-events/news-detail/an-iconic-guro-mask/

http://www.tribal-art-auktion.de/fr/actualites/actualites-detail/une-oeuvre-de-latelier-agba/


Comparing literature


Publications

AHDRC: 0060339


Exhibition

L'art indigène des Colonies Françaises d'Afrique et d'Océanie et du Congo Belge, Paris, Pavillon de Marsan November 1923 -January 1924; Brussels, L'Art Nègre, Palais des Beaux-Arts, 15 November-31 December 1930, # 5220

Subscribe to our newsletter

Join over 10,000 tribal art collectors. Don't miss out on upcoming news and auctions.

Subscribe today