Masking Traditions in Africa British Marines displaying their loot after the sack of Benin, 1897 Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon Oil on canvas, 1907 Edouard Manet, "The Luncheon on the Grass“, oil on canvas, 1862/1863 Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon Oil on canvas, 1907 Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselle D’Avignon (detail) 1907, oil on canvas Mbuya (sickness) mask, Pende, Zaire, Polychrome wood, 20th century Pablo Picasso, Fang Mask, Gabon, polychrome wood, Detail of Les Demoiselle D’Avignon, 1907, 20th century Oil on canvas Mask, Republic of the Congo, Painted wood Late 19th century “the mask weren’t just like any pieces of sculpture…Not in the least, they were magic things…these Negroes were intercessors, … They were against everything, against unknown threatening spirits… I kept on staring at the fetishes. Then it came to me. I too was against everything… I too felt that everything was unknown, hostile…” --Pablo Picasso “The African masks opened a new horizon to me. They made it possible for me to make contact with Instinctive things, which inhibited feeling that went against the false (Western) tradition which I hated” --Georges Braque The mask is the mediating force at that delicate intersection between the real and the imagined; the concrete and the imperceptible; The serious and the playful; the whimsical and the terrifying; the living and the dead 1. Ancestral veneration/worship; mediation 2. Rites of passage—education 3. Social control—punitive; intervention; social harmony 4. Entertainment—humor and satire. Ancestral Veneration Figure with Mask like Head, Rock Painting, Tassili, 10,000 BP Mask Head Yoruba (Ife) Nigeria 12th-15th century (700-500 BP) Copper, 33 x 19 cm (13 in) Oba William Ayeni, Orangun of Ila wearing the Great Crown (Ade Nla) with beaded Veil, Yoruba Peoples, Nigeria 20th cent Chiwara Masquerades in performance during the agricultural cycle, Bamana Peoples, Mali Crest Mask, Chiwara, Bamana, Mali Wood, 20th century Members of the Do in performance Dossi, Burkina Faso (Upper Volta) Wood, natural pigments, grass fibers 20th century Bobo (Butterfly) mask, Burkina Faso (Upper Volta), Painted Wood, cloth, 20th century Dje (antelope) masquerade in performance, Dabuzra, Cote D’Ivoire Elephant masks in performance, Cameroon, cotton, beads, animal skin, feathers, 1985 Maiden spirit maskers Igbo Peoples, Nigeria 20th cent. Ijele Mask at the 2nd Burial Ceremony, Achalla, Nigeria, Mixed media, 20th century Education, Initiation and other Rites of Passage Sowei Headdress, Gola/Vai Peoples, Liberia and Sierra Leone, Wood, 20th century Sowei Headdress, Sande society, (Gola, Vai Peoples) Liberia Sierra Leone Wood, pigment 20th century Boys’ initiation, Gabon Children’s masquerade Yoruba Peoples Ibadan, Nigeria 21st century Fire spitter mask (kponugu), Senufo, Ivory Coast Wood, 20th century Gelede Headdress with two pythons attempting to swallow a tortoise Yoruba, Nigeria, wood, pigment, 20th century Social Control: Punishment and Warfare Yoruba Egungun Masquerade, mixed media, 21st century Mask used in executing criminals, Yoruba Peoples, Nigeria 21st cent. Entertainment, Humor and Satire: Parodying “Otherness” & Antisocial Behavior Masquerades, Yoruba, Nigeria, wood, cotton, 20th century Critique and Parody of unrestrained sexual desires conceptualized in the image of a monkey, Egungun, Yoruba, Nigeria Wood, cloth 20th century A parody of a prostitute who prowls Around looking for victims, while stroking her teeth, Egungun, Yoruba, Nigeria Painted wood, cloth 20th century Parody of the town fool Egungun, Yoruba , Nigeria Painted wood, cloth 20th century Parodying the Colonial “Other” (Egungun) Masquerade Yoruba, Nigeria wood, animal hide, cotton, pigments 20th century Parodying the Police Igbo Masquerade Nigeria, 20th century Egungun in Acrobatic Display Yoruba Peoples, Ibadan, Nigeria 21st century Yoruba Egungun Masquerade, mixed media, 21st century Nick Cave American, b. 1956 Soundsuit, 2006 Found knit sweaters, socks, drift wood, dryer lint, and paint Helen M. Danforth Acquisition Fund 2007.11