1974.SC.36 Reliquary guardian figure (mbumba bwiti)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The Sango peoples practiced a funerary tradition similar to that of their neighbors, the Kota. Sango reliquaries, which were also protected by sculpted wood guardian figures covered with metal, were associated with individuals rather than lineages and were expected to ensure safe and productive travel and trade. Kept in a special room in quarters belonging to the head of a family, they were present on occasions such as the end of mourning or at rituals concerning healing, hunting, or the search for evildoers.

Reliquary guardian figures of this type typically have extremely stylized human heads with a high forehead. The arched brows, nose, and horizontal patterns represent scarification and are formed with metal; the staring eyes are made of bone. The ears are conceived as cylinders that project from the sides of the face. The Dallas figure is distinguished by a pair of barlike forms that extend downward beneath the ears as if to echo the shape of the "shoulders" of the lozenge-shaped body. The base of the figure would have been thrust into a reliquary made of beaten bark in which were preserved the ancestor's bones as well as magical ingredients such as shells, forest fruits, and various charms or amulets. 

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 202-203.

NOTES

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PROVENANCE 
n.d.: Schindler Collection, New York

1974: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Gustave and Franyo Schindler Collection of African Sculpture, gift of the McDermott Foundation [1]

[1] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

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General Description
 
The Sango peoples practiced a funerary tradition similar to that of their neighbors, the Kota. Sango reliquaries, which were also protected by sculpted wood guardian figures covered with metal, were associated with individuals rather than lineages and were expected to ensure safe and productive travel and trade. Kept in a special room in quarters belonging to the head of a family, they were present on occasions such as the end of mourning or at rituals concerning healing, hunting, or the search for evildoers.

Reliquary guardian figures of this type typically have extremely stylized human heads with a high forehead. The arched brows, nose, and horizontal patterns represent scarification and are formed with metal; the staring eyes are made of bone. The ears are conceived as cylinders that project from the sides of the face. The Dallas figure is distinguished by a pair of barlike forms that extend downward beneath the ears as if to echo the shape of the "shoulders" of the lozenge-shaped body. The base of the figure would have been thrust into a reliquary made of beaten bark in which were preserved the ancestor's bones as well as magical ingredients such as shells, forest fruits, and various charms or amulets. 

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 202-203.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
n.d.: Schindler Collection, New York

1974: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Gustave and Franyo Schindler Collection of African Sculpture, gift of the McDermott Foundation [1]

[1] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

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1974.Sc.36
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
%Archived
heads (representations): AAT: 300262520
ritual (events): AAT: 300065284
@Bilal-Gore
wood (plant material): AAT: 300011914
*Arts of Africa
patterns (design elements): AAT: 300010108
brass (alloy): AAT: 300010946
Gabon (nation): TGN: 1000164
bone (material): AAT: 300011798
protection: AAT: 300164923
reliquaries (liturgical containers): AAT: 300187549
eyes (animal or human components): AAT: 300400484
ears (human and animal components): DMA
reliquary figures: AAT: 300184881
cylindrical (geometric shape): AAT: 300378890
scarifications (visual works): AAT: 300262452
Sango: AAT: 300016220
mourning: AAT: 300238450
source file
object_notes_3_a-0497.xml.nores