IDNO
P.57265.RDG
Description
Full-length studio portrait of a Maasai man in warrior clothing and holding a spear with a feather? ball at the tip and a decorated shield. The man wears a pelt as a cloak, a headdress with an upright lion mane fur projection and the strap worn over the chin, and his hair has been braided and anointed with ochre with the fringe gathered to form a knot at the centre of the forehead. He is adorned with ear ornaments, chain neck ornaments with attached talismans, a metal arm ornament with two upright projections, and metal wrist ornaments. The studio backdrop is painted with a European style forest. [JD 20/06/2007]
Place
E Africa; Kenya; Eastern Province
Cultural Affliation
Kamba [historically Akamba]; Maasai [historically Masai]
Named Person
Photographer
Young, William D. [Photograph Studio]
Collector / Expedition
Ridgeway, William
Date
circa 1890 - 1920
Collection Name
Ridgeway Collection
Source
Format
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
P.57261.RDG to P.57273.RDG were found in C274/2/ which came from C274/. The latter was kept in Wooden Drawer VI.
Place: Entry previously record ‘Kamba’ as place but research shows that the term applies to a cultural group. The two fields have been amended accordingly. [JD 4/10/2006]
Group: The Kamba (Mukamba in singular Akamba in the plural) are a Bantu ethnic group who live in the semi-arid Eastern Province of Kenya stretching east from Nairobi to Tsavo and north up to Embu, Kenya. This land is called Ukamba or land of the Akamba. Depending on the source, they are either the third or the fifth largest ethnic group in Kenya. They speak the Kikamba language. [Source: Ethnologue Online 15th Edition, JD 4/10/2006]
Group: Maasai is a language group of Kenya spoken in Kajiado and Narok districts and Rift Valley District. [Source: Ethnologue Online 15th Edition, JD 19/6/2007]
Context: The climax of warriorhood was killing of a lion and the warrior then graduated from wearing an ostrich headdress to a lion made one. It was used during raids and wars as it gives the physical advantage of height and the wearer looks scarier and braver.
Today such headdresses are used for ceremonial functions and dances since killing of lions is prohibited by law." [Information provided by Njeri Gachihi, Rethinking Relationships Project, 15 December 2020, JD 04/03/2021]
Biographical Information: See Biographies file for information on William D. Young. [JD 14/6/2007]
Publication: The photograph has been digitised for the European Collected Library of Artistic Performance (ECLAP) and is accessible on the portal http://www.eclap.eu/drupal/. [SG 30/10/2012]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [JD 2/7/2007]
FM:191915
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