Lobi, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana
Bateba Figure.
Lobi people number
160,000 to 300,000. Formerly warlike, even among themselves, they occupy defensible
compounds with narrow openings and fairly high walls. They are primarily agriculturists,
with millet, sorghum, and corn fields surrounding their compounds. Villages are comprised
simply of several compounds living under the rules, protection, and beneficence of a
particular deity, thil, associated with their
land. Social behavior is regulated by these thila (plural
of thil), whose will is passed to ordinary
people by priests and diviners. It is thila, who
order sculptures and other art forms to be made. The most important of these forms is the
sculpture called bateba. The bateba is the name for anthropomorphic sculptures
in human form, but with supernatural powers. According to the Lobi these statues are
living beings which can move, speak to each other and even die when their bodies have
decayed too far. On the advice of soothsayers, bategas
are placed in shrines where they help to ward off disease, misfortune and above all
witches. The specific meaning of this rather unusual Lobi statue is not clear.
Material:
wood
Size:
20x 13½x 6
Price:
$285+$34 (S&H) Reserved -- E. N.
[#O9L9S641]

