Rare "kwagh hir" festival mask - Nigeria, Tiv
wood, paint, metal, black mass, seed capsules, plant fibre, bone, magic pendant (wooden object wrapped in cotton fibres and newspaper), base
"Kwagh-hir" (literally means "something magical") is a multipart culturally edifying art form of the Tiv people of central Nigeria which became popular in the 1960s. It is a dramatic public performance telling moral stories of past and current events, and incorporates puppetry, masquerading, music, dance and animated narratives to portray its moral themes. It is used by the Tiv people to reinforce traditional beliefs and convey other worldly tales to educate, socialize, provide secular entertainment and address societal issues.
"Kwagh-hir" is a higher art form of "kwagh-alom", an aged practice of the Tiv people where the family was treated to a storytelling session by creative storytellers, usually in the early hours of the night after the day's farming work by moonlight
A monograph published by Jonathan Fogel and Ethan Rider in 2017 shows a selection from the rich repertoire of extraordinary masks, puppets and other props used at the "kwagh-hir" festival.
H: 80 cm, H: 31,5 inch
Provenance:
Allan Stone, New York, USA
Lit.: Rider, Ethan & Jonathan Fogel, "Something magical - The Kwagh-Hir of the Tiv", Objects from the Jerome Bunch Collection, BFP 2017
Continent: Africa
Condition Report: See description
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wood, paint, metal, black mass, seed capsules, plant fibre, bone, magic pendant (wooden object wrapped in cotton fibres and newspaper), base
"Kwagh-hir" (literally means "something magical") is a multipart culturally edifying art form of the Tiv people of central Nigeria which became popular in the 1960s. It is a dramatic public performance telling moral stories of past and current events, and incorporates puppetry, masquerading, music, dance and animated narratives to portray its moral themes. It is used by the Tiv people to reinforce traditional beliefs and convey other worldly tales to educate, socialize, provide secular entertainment and address societal issues.
"Kwagh-hir" is a higher art form of "kwagh-alom", an aged practice of the Tiv people where the family was treated to a storytelling session by creative storytellers, usually in the early hours of the night after the day's farming work by moonlight
A monograph published by Jonathan Fogel and Ethan Rider in 2017 shows a selection from the rich repertoire of extraordinary masks, puppets and other props used at the "kwagh-hir" festival.
H: 80 cm, H: 31,5 inch
Provenance:
Allan Stone, New York, USA
Lit.: Rider, Ethan & Jonathan Fogel, "Something magical - The Kwagh-Hir of the Tiv", Objects from the Jerome Bunch Collection, BFP 2017
Continent: Africa
Condition Report: See description