Ex-French collection of African art The African mask Kwele Pipibuze, Pibibuze, ("the man") symbolizes the light and clairvoyance required to overcome witchcraft. This type of mask, here in a reduced version, was not always intended to be worn, but decorated the walls of huts. Two-tone granular patina. Minor chips. Discreet restoration of a horn. Depending on the presence of horns and their arrangement, the masks are called pibibudzé, Ekuku zokou, etc... and are associated with the ancestors or the spirits of the forest, " ekuk ". A tribe of the Kota group, the Kwélé, Bakwélé, live in the forest on the northern border of the Republic of Congo. They live from hunting, agriculture and metallurgy. Practicing the cult called Bwété borrowed from the Ngwyes, which was accompanied by obligatory initiation rites, they used at the end of the ceremonies in addition to the zoomorphic masks of elephant or gorilla, the ekuk masks evoking the antelope whose horns join in a loop under the chin. The blood of the antelope was also used among the Kwélé for therapeutic purposes.
180.00 € Possibility of payment in 2x (2x 90.0 €) This item is sold with its certificate of authenticity
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