Baule
(Baoule, Bawule) Côte
dIvoire
Male
ancestor waka sona figure. Around 1 million Baule occupy a part of the eastern
Cote dIvoire that is both forest and savanna land. Baule society was characterized
by extreme individualism, great tolerance, a deep aversion toward rigid political
structures, and a lack of age classes, initiation, circumcision, priests and secret
societies. The Baule is one of the rare tribes where sculpture is produced for aesthetic
appreciation as well as for ritualistic purposes. Baule wooden sculptures allow a closer
contact with the supernatural world of ancestors. The ancestral statues, male and female,
have a strongly marked, traditional style. The body is slender, face delicate, mouth
finally cut. The tribal hairdo is highly stylized corresponding to the elaborate hairdo
still used by Baule today. The name of these statues is waka sona, wooden people. Although the
ancestor sculptures main purpose was to insure the beneficial presence of the
ancestor, they had additional uses: to insure fertility, to prevent miscarriages, to bring
about good harvests, and generally to promote personal well-being and prosperity.
Material: wood
Size:
23x6x6
Price:
$265+$26 (S&H)
[#U9B2S360]

