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tribes Created with Eselt - Responsive Templates for eBay Sellers
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african mask The African tribes
African The African tribes
Traditional African masks play an important role in certain traditional
African rituals and ceremonies.
Masks serve an important role in rituals or ceremonies with varied purposes
like ensuring a good harvest, addressing tribal needs in time of peace or war,
or conveying spiritual presences in initiation rituals or burial ceremonies.
Some masks represent the spirits of deceased ancestors. Others symbolize totem
animals, creatures important to a certain family or group. In some cultures,
like the Cuba culture of Zaire, masks represent specific figures in tribal
mythology, like a king or a rival to the ruler.
The wearer of the mask is often believed to be able to communicate to the
being symbolized by it, or to be possessed by who or what the mask represents.
Dogon ceremonial mask in use
Ritual and ceremonial masks are an essential feature of the traditional
culture of the peoples of a part of Sub-Saharan Africa, e.g. roughly between
the Sahara and the Kalahari Desert. While the specific implications associated
with ritual masks widely vary in different cultures, some traits are common to
most African cultures. For instance, masks usually have a spiritual and
religious meaning and they are used in ritual dances and social and religious
events, and a special status is attributed to the artists that create masks to
those that wear them in ceremonies. In most cases, mask-making is an art that
has been passed on from father to son, along with the knowledge of the symbolic
meanings conveyed by these masks. African masks come in all different colors,
such as red, black, orange, and brown.
In most traditional African cultures, the person who wears a ritual mask
conceptually loses his or her human life and turns into the spirit represented
by the mask itself. [1] This transformation of the mask wearer into a spirit
usually relies on other practices, such as specific types of music and dance,
or ritual costumes that contribute to the shedding of the mask-wearer's human
identity. The mask wearer thus becomes a sort of medium that allows for a
dialogue between the community and the spirits (usually those of the dead or
nature-related spirits). Masked dances are a part of most traditional African
ceremonies related to weddings, funerals, initiation rites, and so on. Some of
the most complex rituals that have been studied by scholars are found in
Nigerian cultures such as those of the Yoruba and Edo peoples, rituals that
bear some resemblance to the Western notion of theater. [2]
Since every mask has a specific spiritual meaning, most traditions comprise
several different traditional masks. The traditional religion of the Dogon
people of Mali, for example, comprises three main cults (the Awa or cult of the
dead, the Bini or cult of the communication with the spirits, and the Lebe or
cult of nature); each of these has its pantheon of spirits, corresponding to 78
different types of masks overall. It is often the case that the artistic
quality and complexity of a mask reflects the relative importance of the
portrayed spirit in the systems of beliefs of a particular people; for example,
simpler masks such as the kple kple of the Baoulé people of Côte d'Ivoire
essentially a circle with minimal eyes, mouth and horns) are associated with
minor spirits. [3]
Masks are one of the elements of great African art that have most evidently
influenced European and Western art in general; in the 20th century, artistic
movements such as cubism, fauvism and expressionism have often taken
inspiration from the vast and diverse heritage of African masks. [4] Influences
of this heritage can also be found in other traditions such as South- and
Central American masked Carnival parades.
Subject and style
African masks are usually shaped after a human face or some animal's muzzle,
albeit rendered in a sometimes highly abstract form. The inherent lack of
realism in African masks (and African art in general) is justified by the fact
that most African cultures clearly distinguish the essence of a subject from
its looks, the former, rather than the latter, being the actual subject of
artistic representation . An extreme example is given by nwantantay masks of
the Bwa people (Burkina Faso) that represent the flying spirits of the forest;
since these spirits are deemed to be invisible, the corresponding masks are
shaped after abstract, purely geometrical forms.
Stylish elements in a mask's looks are codified by the tradition and may
either identify a specific community or convey specific meanings. For example,
both the Bwa and the Buna people of Burkina Faso have hawk masks, with the
shape of the beak identifying a mask as either Bwa or Buna. In both cases, the
hawk's wings are decorated with geometric patterns that have moral meanings;
saw-shaped lines represent the hard path followed by ancestors, while checkered
patterns represent the interaction of opposites (male-female, night-day, and so
on) [5]
Traits representing moral values are found in many cultures. Masks from the
Senufo people of Ivory Coast, for example, have their eyes half closed,
symbolizing a peaceful attitude, self-control, and patience. In Sierra Leone
and elsewhere, small eyes and mouths represent humility, and a wide, protruding
forehead represents wisdom. In Gabon, large chins and mouths represent
authority and strength. [5] The Grebo of the Ivory Coast carve masks with round
eyes to represent alertness and anger, with the straight nose representing an
unwillingness to retreat.
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