IDNO
LS.52051.GIJ
Description
A beautiful female mask. The wooden face mask is carved delicately and consists of two slit eyes, long nose, mouth, etched markings on either side of the temples and squarish ears. The centre of the forehead is incised with a diamond shaped marking with striations, and emanating from the forehead is a long hairstyle or coiffure with incised horizontal striations, the top of the mask is plain and rounded. The holes for attaching the mask are visible in the photograph.
Place
W Africa; Nigeria; Eastern Nigeria; Northern Bende division
Cultural Affliation
Item
Named Person
Photographer
Jones, Gwilliam Iwan (known as G.I.)
Collector / Expedition
Date
circa 1930 - 1939
Collection Name
Jones Collection
Source
Jones, Gwilliam Iwan (known as G.I.)
Format
Lantern Slide Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
LS.52051.GIJ to LS.52057.GIJ were found with the piece of paper now numbered C247/4/ which was in wooden box formerly numbered 22. It has now been renumbered C247/ by the cataloguer.
The inscription on the box as well as a descriptive list of slides pasted on the inside lid of the box indicates that it originally contained lantern slides from the Fens and belonged to D.G. Reid.
However, the lantern slides are attributed to G.I. Jones because the handwriting on the papers found inside wooden box C246/ is similar to the handwriting on the papers found inside wooden box C247/.
Publication: Same image published in Jones (1984), p. 207, Figure 110 with the caption "beautiful mask".
Context: ...the Item and Alayi tribes had their own particular masquerades called Lughulu. The characters wore masks, not heads, and these were of two kinds: beautiful, which were female, sometimes white-faced, sometimes stained a reddish brown colour with cam wood: and ugly, which were either white-faced or stained black, and were considered comic rather than fierce. These masks were sometimes full-sized but often, like some Ogoni masks, were small and designed to cover only the upper portion of the actor’s face, leaving his mouth and jaw exposed (Jones, 1984, p.206)
Context: Cole and Aniakor write, "In Item and Ugweke, for example, a series of fine masks are danced in a ‘play’ called Lughulu that includes the familiar opposition of pretty females and ugly males but almost nothing is known about the cult." (Cole and Aniakor, 1989, p. 166).
Bibliographical Reference:
Jones, G.I., 1984. The Art of Eastern Nigeria (Cambridge University Press)
Cole, H. & C. Aniakor, 1984. Igbo Arts: Community and Cosmos (Museum of Cultural History, University of California)
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Alicia Fentiman 9/4/2008]
FM:186701
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