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LOT 82851661  |  Catalogue: African Art

Yaure - Côte d'Ivoire (No Reserve Price)

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A Yauro mask, Ivory coast, collected in the region Zenoula, carved form one piece of wood, the small mouth, elongated nose, eyes open in a slit; scarification marks on the temples, and s small protrusion on the forehead. the hair is carved intricarely. The mask is capped by a platform with threebirds on top of it with the one in th emiddle facing to th efront and the other two facing the one in the middle withtheir beaks carved into the eyes of the one in the middle. Signs of use. Certificate of origin and provenance.

“To articulate historians, the most consistent features of Baule art is a kind of peaceful containment. Faces tend to have downcast eyes and figures most often hold their ams against the body. Among their abundant art forms, the Baule people continue to place the greatest value on masks and figure sculptures, which remain the only sculptural art still widely used in Baule villages. While there is a difference between the Baule view of their objects and that of Western connoisseurs, there are points of agreement. Aesthetic appreciation is one: Baule artist, and individual owners of objects, certainly sometimes enjoy the beauty of these objects and the skill it took coproduce them.
Ornaments above the face are chosen for their beauty and have no iconographic significance” p. 141.

Lit: Baule: African Art, Western Eyes. Susan M. Vogel 1997.

"Portrait masks embody the core Baule sculptural style that is echoed in figural sculpture and decorative arts. They also have provided Baule sculptors with their prime opportunity for artistic invention, and the corpus demonstrates enormous formal diversity. This diversity is often apparent in imaginative decorative passages extending above the face […] Such masks appeared as the final sequence of an operatic public entertainment known as Mblo. Mblo performances consist of a succession of dances that escalate in complexity and importance, culminating ultimately in tributes to the community's most distinguished member. Individuals honored in this way are depicted by a mask that is conceived of as their artistic double or namesake. "

Lit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Metropolitan Museum Bulletin: Recent Acquisitions, 2004-2005 (Fall 2005) , p. 47.

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[ translate ]

A Yauro mask, Ivory coast, collected in the region Zenoula, carved form one piece of wood, the small mouth, elongated nose, eyes open in a slit; scarification marks on the temples, and s small protrusion on the forehead. the hair is carved intricarely. The mask is capped by a platform with threebirds on top of it with the one in th emiddle facing to th efront and the other two facing the one in the middle withtheir beaks carved into the eyes of the one in the middle. Signs of use. Certificate of origin and provenance.

“To articulate historians, the most consistent features of Baule art is a kind of peaceful containment. Faces tend to have downcast eyes and figures most often hold their ams against the body. Among their abundant art forms, the Baule people continue to place the greatest value on masks and figure sculptures, which remain the only sculptural art still widely used in Baule villages. While there is a difference between the Baule view of their objects and that of Western connoisseurs, there are points of agreement. Aesthetic appreciation is one: Baule artist, and individual owners of objects, certainly sometimes enjoy the beauty of these objects and the skill it took coproduce them.
Ornaments above the face are chosen for their beauty and have no iconographic significance” p. 141.

Lit: Baule: African Art, Western Eyes. Susan M. Vogel 1997.

"Portrait masks embody the core Baule sculptural style that is echoed in figural sculpture and decorative arts. They also have provided Baule sculptors with their prime opportunity for artistic invention, and the corpus demonstrates enormous formal diversity. This diversity is often apparent in imaginative decorative passages extending above the face […] Such masks appeared as the final sequence of an operatic public entertainment known as Mblo. Mblo performances consist of a succession of dances that escalate in complexity and importance, culminating ultimately in tributes to the community's most distinguished member. Individuals honored in this way are depicted by a mask that is conceived of as their artistic double or namesake. "

Lit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Metropolitan Museum Bulletin: Recent Acquisitions, 2004-2005 (Fall 2005) , p. 47.

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Time, Location
28 Apr 2024
Germany
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