Cimier de danse "tu ngünga" · Prairie Camerounaise, Bamum · ID: 3043285
Description
wood, brown patina, smiling mask face on plug-like base, wickerwork base, plant fibre cuff, min. dam., cracks, small missing parts, traces of abrasion, base.
Such headdresses wearing serpents are performed as male/female pairs on large festive occasions.
Serpents are frequent in the Grassfields repertoire, for they possess extraordinary qualities: they move forward without feet, shed their skins when they metamorphose into larger creatures, and threaten, for they are poisonous or suffocate their victims. They are believed to incarnate ancestors, and that leaders could change their shape and reappear in form of this reptiles. It is the ultimate royal animal, but in Bamum it took the form of a double-headed serpent associated with their kings ability to strike on two fronts at once. The motif is unique to the Bamum kingdom, and appears like a signature in many ancient works of art.
L’objet Cimier de danse “tu ngünga” avec l’ID d’objet 3043285 a fait partie de la dernière vente aux enchères 88e vente aux enchères Tribal Art dans 10 mars 2018 le Zemanek-Münster Hôtel des ventes. L’objet portant le numéro de lot 349 a atteint un prix de vente de 3 000 €.
Vous trouverez ici d’autres objets et des informations utiles sur le thème Art africain.
Littérature comparée
Geary, Christraud, Bamum, Mailand 2011, p. 107, ill. 15
Publications
AHDRC: 0150576