Igbo (Ibo), Nigeria
Maiden
spirit (aghogho) mask. Eight
million Igbo occupy the plateaus of eastern Nigeria. Living in thick forests or on semi
fertile marshland, they grow yams, fish, and have a long tradition of commerce. They have
no large towns. The outstanding characteristic of the many Igbo masks is that they are
painted chalk white, the color of the dead or spirit. The present mask is a rather
naturalistic type. The aghogho masks of this type were used by the mmwo society.
Masked dancers costumed in bright colored patchwork pants and blouses, with their hands
and feet covered, appeared at funerals. The masked dancers did not merely represent, but
were believed to be, the spirits of the dead. They disguised their voices, aiming, as in
so many African burial ceremonies, to induce the dead mans spirit to enter the
spirit world so as to avoid any harm to the survivors. The same masks were also used at
the beginning of the dry season. Representing the delicate beauty of the woman, the
dancers appeared wearing false breasts, associating human fertility with the fertility of
the land.
Material: wood
Size:
H. 20½, W. 8½, D. 11
Price: $225+$30 (S&H)
Sold -- W.
P. [#G3I6M230]

