IDNO
P.71436.GIJ
Description
An Alose (tutelary deity) figure standing next to some small shrubs. The Alose figure is quite stylised and standing upright holding a stick in one hand and clutching something? else in the other. The head appears to be adorned with a high coiffure, swirled patterns on the head, a white painted face outlining arched eyebrows, eyes, square nose, and thin mouth. The neck is coiled with seven rings or markings. The torso shows a necklace, pointed breasts, scarification markings in the centre, a protruding umbilicus, a wrapper tied around the waist, and white painted markings around the wrists and ankles. Next to the figure is a small pot and wooden staff.
Place
W Africa; Nigeria; South Eastern Nigeria
Cultural Affliation
Igbo [historically Ibo]; Orsu
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
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
P.71400.GIJ to P.71498.GIJ were kept in box 5, now numbered C302/.
P.71424 to P.71438 were found wrapped in paper, now numbered C302/6/.
Publication: Same image published on John McCall’s G.I. Jones website with the following information: [Source: www.siu.edu/~anthro/mccall/jones/, AF ]
1. Index to Igbo music, shrines, architecture and other cultural artifacts
2. Alusi or Arunsi (shrines)
3. Alusi With Ikenga and other ritual objects (15th image).
Context: Jones writes that “ cult figures of tutelary deities were made principally among the Northern and Isuama Ibo.”(Jones, 1989, p. 37).
Context: Jones also writes about the carved wooden Aluse figures, he notes that, “A statue was associated for the most part with a religious or magical cult. The statue represented, stood for, a deity or spirit and it did not really matter what the object looked like provided the symbolism was accepted by the participants it the ritual”. (Jones, 1989, p.54)
Context: In relation to the Alusi figures, Cole and Aniakor write that, “the dead are conceived as part of the everyday world, and just as clearly, their presence can hold a positive or negative valence for the living; exactly the same is true of the tutelary deities, alusi. These forces, however, are neither personal (chi or ancestors) nor universal (Chineke, Chukwu). Rather, they are in part specific, usually tangible phenomena such as: Earth, the Niger or Imo river, Eke, Afo, Orie/Oye, or Nkwo market, an extraordinary tree, a binding oath at a particular shrine, or the canyon of erosion in Agulu. The preeminence of Ala/Ani does not eclipse the vitality of these other deities, especially those associated with water, or of Amadioha, god of thunder and lightening and, by extension, rain. These anthropomorphic male and female deities have priests and often elaborate cult apparatus, symbolic works of art, and finely decorated compounds. Each has general and specific powers, and although their priesthoods may be held by certain lineages, the more commanding of these cults have constituencies cutting across lines of kinship and stressing communal worship. Such tutelary deities are close to people, fast-acting (for good or ill), and often capricious, thus requiring frequent attention and sacrifice. ...(Cole and Aniakor, 1984, p.16).
Context: Jones also writes about the carved wooden Aluse figures, he notes that, “A statue was associated for the most part with a religious or magical cult. The statue represented, stood for, a deity or spirit and it did not really matter what the object looked like provided the symbolism was accepted by the participants it the ritual”. (Jones, 1984, p.54)
Bibliographical Reference: Cole, H. & C. Aniakor, 1984. Igbo Arts: Community and Cosmos (Museum of Cultural History, University of California)Jones, G.I., 1984. The Art of Eastern Nigeria (Cambridge University Press); Jones, G.I. 1989, Ibo Art (Shire)
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Alicia Fentiman 12/11/2007]
FM:206086
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