Zemanek-Münster

Ceremonial headdress "kwonro"

Côte d'Ivoire, Sénoufo
n'est plus disponible
Provenance
Michel Gaud, Saint Tropez, France
Taille
H: 72 cm
H: 28.3 inch

Description

wood, blotched brown patina, cap-like wickerwork crest, rep. (metal clamps), min. dam., cracks, traces of abrasion;
the “kwonro” ceremonial headdress is a type which was worn by Nafana initiates, who were lavishly decorated with white cowrie shell ornaments, in a public dance that celebrates to the community the completion of “kwonro” and the second grade of “poro”. The flat openwork board would originally have been covered with ritual white paint in the checkerboard patterns. The openwork figure or ideogram in the centre is one of the most common images in Senufo graphic arts, that of the “ndeo” or nature spirit. These crests are rare, only few of them are preserved.


Littérature comparée

Förster, Till, Die Kunst der Senufo aus Schweizer Sammlungen, Zürich 1988, p. 17 f.

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