View full screen - View 1 of Lot 46. Bamana Antelope Headdress, Mali.

Property from the Collection of Marc Leuthold, New York

Bamana Antelope Headdress, Mali

Lot Closed

November 22, 07:48 PM GMT

Estimate

12,000 - 18,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from the Collection of Marc Leuthold, New York

Bamana Antelope Headdress, Mali


Height: 43 1/8 in (109.5 cm)

John J. Klejman, New York
Adolph and Annette Leuthold, South Norwalk, Connecticut, acquired from the above on October 31, 1964
Marc Leuthold, New York, by descent from the above

The Bamana antelope headdresses known as ci wara are among the most iconic and recognizable forms in the entire corpus of African Art and are world-famous as a symbol of the continent and its culture. The present vertical ci wara antelope headdress is of classic form, with an exceptional glossy aged patina from traditional use and handling.

Pascal Imperato provides a summary of the varying forms of ci wara antelope headdresses: “There exist two principal sorts of Tyi Wara Koun among the Bambara [Bamana]: the vertical and the horizontal. Within these groups, one finds several sub-styles. The vertical forms are encountered in the east of Bambara country, the horizontal in the west” (Pascal James Imperato, “The Dance of the Tyi Wara”, African Arts, Vol. 4, No. 1, Autumn 1970, p. 72). The present vertical headdress exhibits the long, upward-pointing horns and the face extended downwards. Its body is composed of five curved portions, four of which are joined by rhythically repeated triangular forms.


Unlike most ceremonies, women are permitted to attend ci wara events. The initiations and some of the public ceremonies are organized by the village association ton. While many of the ceremonies associated with this society are very public, some of the rites are kept secret, and only men can participate. Ci wara celebrates agricultural work and glorifies male and female union: “The organization of the ci wara performance is based on the Bamana respect for the power and efficiency of the union of male and female. As human reproduction is the result of the sexual union between man and woman, so agricultural fertility is attributed to the union between fire (the sun), an expression of the male principle, and earth and water, an expression of the female principle” (James T. Brink, Dialectics of Aesthetic Form in Bamana Art, Milwaukee, 1981, p. 25).