IDNO
P.71654.GIJ
Description
A wooden Ikenga figure seated on a round circular stool. The figure is holding a cutlass in one hand wrapped in twine, and a white staff in the other. The head of the carved figure depicts a white painted face with carved facial features accentuated by black paint, around the face are two curved horns and on top of the head are two larger curved horns and a few pieces of twine attached to them. The neck of the figure is thick and the figure is carved with a wooden neck ring, a waist cloth, and there are two carved white leg rings. Leaning against the figure is a calabash.
Place
W Africa; Nigeria; South Eastern Nigeria; Onitsha province; Nri Awka
Cultural Affliation
Igbo [historically Ibo]; Nri Awka
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.71652.GIJ to P.71658.GIJ were presumed to come from box 4 now numbered C301/.
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. Ikenga
3. Ikenga Nri-Awka Igbo (1st image).
Context: Jones writes that “ cult figures of tutelary deities were made principally among the Northern and Isuama Ibo.” In reference to Ikenga figures, he writes, “ The best known Ibo personal cult and the one that has given rise to the greatest number of carvings is that of Ikenga, a Lower Niger cult of a man’s right arm and of success associated with it, which the Edo shared with the Western, Northern, most of the Southern Ibo and with Igala groups. The Ohuhu-Ngwa, Cross River and Northeastern Ibo did not participate in it. Most Ibo and Edo had a small cylindrical object with some geometrical carving on it and ending in a pair of pointed horns. Some Western Ibo increased the size so that it looked more like a circular stool . Other Ibo and Edo added a head and some carved a whole figure. The Nri-Akwa Ibo produced the most elaborate cult objects and in the greatest number. Older examples carved by them elaborated the horns and the head, which was shown smoking a pipe. Later ones consisted of complete figures which were shown standing or more usually seated on a circular stool with a cutlass in one hand and a human head in the other or, alternatively, holding a tusk horn and an ornamental staff (Jones, 1989, p.40). Also, see Jones, 1984, pp. 141-142.
Context: Cole and Aniakor write in detail about Ikenga (see Chapter Two). They show that the concept of Ikenga reverberates throughout much of Igbo life . These images are found in the shrines of individual diviners and corporate tutelary cults and as representatives of age-grades and communities. ...They continue to describe that the basic Igbo Ikenga image is a human with horns, sometimes rendered very simply as an abstract head and horns base. Larger, more elaborate examples include fully realized males seated on stools, holding and wearing various symbols, and with more or less complex headdresses determined in part by horns and often including several other motifs (Cole and Aniakor, 1984, p.24).
Publications: 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 26/11/2007]
FM:206304
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