-40%

Yoruba Bead Hat (#593)

$ 314.16

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Provenance: Previously owned by Ellen Hobbs
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: Dusted not cleaned, bird on top screws in place, but does not fit snugly; some missing beads, some loose strands.
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Nigeria
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days

    Description

    Formerly Displayed:
    ·
    Kennedy Museum of Art at Ohio University (February through April 2007)
    ·
    Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine art at Auburn University (February through May 2008).
    ·
    5
    th
    Avenue Mask Museum, Hendersonville NC (# 593), see photo with other masks
    Tag on mask: “Yoruba Bead Hat from Nigeria”
    Measurements are approximate.
    Mask height: 14
    inches
    Mask diameter:
    8 1/2 inches
    Material: Beads, cloth
    Acquired year: pre2004
    Acquired from: unknown
    Information and the only claim with respect to authenticity about this mask are taken from notes and sketches by Ellen Hobbs
    and from the museum catalogue
    Behind the Mask
    .
    No other representations of authenticity are made.
    This “conical crown, called
    adéńlá
    , is worn during a public event by chiefs, rulers, and priests. The two large beaded faces are the faces of royal ancestors that reach back to . . . the first divine ruler who began the royal lineage. . . . The clusters of birds refer to ‘our mothers’. . . . It is understood that the women can transform themselves into birds at night and use their powers negatively. Thus, it is important to keep them happy and honored" (123).
    Quoted from t
    he museum catalog
    Behind the Mask
    (see photos) [copyrighted 2008 by Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art Auburn University (
    www.jcsm.auburn.edu
    ); the pages shown here have been reproduced with the Museum’s permission].