Luba
(Baluba, Kaluba, Louba, Uruwa, Waluba, Warua), Democratic Republic of the Congo
Female ancestor figure. The vast Luba
territory, comprising the entire southeastern part of the DRC, as far as Tanganyika and
Lake Mweru, is uniform as regards language and culture, but racially mixed. Although the history of the Luba people is one of violence and
warfare, their artistic style is characterized by harmonious integration of organically
related forms. The
traditional carvings are for ancestor and spirit cults, for initiation, medical and
divination purposes. The favorite theme in sculpture was woman since, according to a Luba
myth, vilie was the
first woman spirit, founder of the clan and guarantor of fertility and the lineage. Women
were cult guardians, and the royal wives played an important role: sent as emissaries to
the chiefs of neighboring ethnicities, they would contract profitable political alliances
based on marriage. The ancestor figures are characterized by elaborate scarification
patterns on the body.
Material:
wood
Size: H. 11, W, 3,
D. 3
Price: $160+$19 (S&H) [#B6L8S023]

