Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon. - Sold

Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!
This item has been sold Show item
Ethnographic art

Log in or register to view the yield

Sell a similar item in auction
Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!
Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!Buy Bambara - 180757 - Tribal used African Bamun Beads figure - Cameroon.? Bid from 75!
Sell a similar item in auction
  • Description
  • Bambara
Type of artworkEthnographic art
Period1900 to 1944
TechniqueMixed media
StyleAfrican
SubjectFigure
Dimensions37 x 11 x 11 cm (h x w x d)
Translated with Google Translate. Original text show .

Finely crafted african figure from the Bamun, Cameroon, in form of a man. 

Such figures are placed for prestige purposes. 

Hand carved from a single piece of wood, covered with cloth and embroidered with colored glass beads.

Height: 37 cm.

Taxatiewaarde: 225 - 275 euro.

The northern part of Cameroon has been Islamized and has no sculpture; on the other hand, the savannas of the west, the Grassland, are composed of three ethnic groups with ancestors in common. There are the one million Bamileke spread over the southwestern plateaus, in communities that have from 50,000 to 100,000 people; the 500,000 Bamenda-Tikar in the north; and, finally, the Bamum in the northwest, with a population of 80,000. The Bamileke resisting slave raids with suicide or rebellion, contributed very little to the Black population of the New World. The artistic production of the people living in the Grassland of Cameroon is closely associated with royal and societal ceremonies. Large figures, thrones and prestige paraphernalia are used by the king to assert his power.

Bamum (Bamoum, Bamoun, Bamun, Banun, Mom, Mum, Mun) social life was oriented toward the conquest of surrounding chieftainries, and forays were made into neighboring lands: from this stems a warrior mythology and an abundance of material symbols of strength. The Bamum produced large figures encrusted with beads and cowries. Noteworthy elephant heads cast in bronze. There are also: dance masks in the form of a long head and a high neck, also in animal-head form; footstools and thrones decorated and supported by animal or human figures. In the small kingdom of Bangwa, the heads of statues and masks feature puffed-out cheeks. The very characteristic sculpture in the round attains its apogee in a depiction of a horn-player who wears traditional headgear in the shape of a tiara; the thick double arc of his eyebrows overhang, and the mouth is treated in parallelepipedal relief under a heavy nose featuring well-shaped nostrils.


Condition
ConditionVery good
Shipment
Pick up The work can be picked up on location. As a buyer you must bring your own packaging materials. The location is: Hengelo, The Netherlands
ShipmentParcel post
PriceUp to 5 kg.
Within The Netherlands €7.25
To Belgium €24.00
To Germany €24.00
Within EU €24.00
Worldwide €40.00

Guarantee
GuaranteeBy putting the item up for auction, I agree with the Terms of Guarantee as they are applicable at Kunstveiling regarding the accuracy of the description of the item

The seller takes full responsibility for this item. Kunstveiling only provides the platform to facilitate this transaction, which has to be settled directly with the seller. More information.

Bambara 

All items from this tribe (1)

Added by  Africa-Gallery
Member since 2020
426 sold items
All items from this seller (3)
11
37
11
Log in or register to view the yield

Pick upYes, possible
LocationHengelo,  The Netherlands
Auction details
Start time21-2-2021 at 23:12
End time28-2-2021 at 16:49
Bids (1)
Log in or register to view the bidding history