Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon. - Sold

Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!
This item has been sold Show item
Ethnographic art

Log in or register to view the yield

Sell a similar item in auction
Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!
Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!Buy Kwele - Tribal used Old African Kwele animal mask - Cameroon.? Bid from 45!
Sell a similar item in auction
  • Description
  • Kwele
Type of artwork Ethnographic art
Period 1945 to 1999
Technique Wood
Style African
Subject Mask
Dimensions 50 x 25 x 12 cm (h x w x d)
Translated with Google Translate. Original text show .

Rare Tribal used Old african mask from the Kwele, Cameroon 
Hand carved from a single piece of colorful painted wood,
Size: 50 cm.

The Kwele occupy a great forest region on the borders of Gabon, Cameroon and the Republic of Congo. Their village communities comprised a number of lineages and were governed in the usual way for "headless" equatorial societies, that is in a diffuse and more or less informal manner. The Kwele believe that unexplained deaths, epidemic smallpox, and other mysterious threats to the well-being of individuals or the community are caused by witchcraft. Witches are believed to live in male or female hosts, from which they emerge at night to feed upon the internal organs of their victims. The antidote to witchcraft is the beete ritual, which includes masked performances. The beete cult reinforces unity and maintains social order. The beete ritual, which lasted for a week, would open with the departure of men into the forest to hunt antelope, whose flesh, seasoned with medicines, had to be eaten at a meal at the closing ceremony. During the hunt, women and children stayed in the village; after one or two days, ekuk masks would “leave” the forest, enter the village, and invite the people to come dance and sing. Ekuk means both “protective forest spirit” and “children of beete.” It displays a flat surface and often has a whitened heart-shaped face, a triangular nose, coffee-bean eyes and small or non-existent mouth. This mask, with two large horns, represents the antelope. The faces are usually painted in white kaolin earth, a pigment associated by the Kwele with light and clarity, the two essential factors in the fight against evil. Later another mask, the gon (gorilla), announced by bells, would make its entrance; the women would immediately lock up all the domestic animals inside the huts; everyone would begin looking for shelter. Gon is a dangerous mask. The wearer of the gon mask is nude – as opposed to the person dressed in the ekuk, who wears a wide skirt of fibers. The gon mask is made in the image of a skull of a gorilla, an animal feared by the Kwele because of its frequent destruction of their crops. The masks are hung in Kwele houses and also worn during dances related to initiation ceremonies of the beete cult. Their function was to "warm up" the village atmosphere in order to activate the beneficial forces. Maskers made the spirits manifest. Entering the village to the accompaniment of music, male spirits pranced rhythmically, while female spirits (also danced by men) shuffled slowly.

The stands are not included

Condition
ConditionVery good
Shipment
Pick up The work can be picked up on location. As a buyer you must bring your own packaging materials. The location is: Hengelo, The Netherlands
ShipmentParcel post
PriceUp to 5 kg.
Within The Netherlands €7.25

Guarantee
GuaranteeBy putting the item up for auction, I agree with the Terms of Guarantee as they are applicable at Kunstveiling regarding the accuracy of the description of the item

The seller takes full responsibility for this item. Kunstveiling only provides the platform to facilitate this transaction, which has to be settled directly with the seller. More information .

Kwele 

Gabonese Gabonese All items from this tribe (1)

Added by  Africa-Gallery
Member since 2020
668 sold items
All items from this seller (24)
25
50
12