Fokwe mi drum

Eastern Lagoons artist

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 341

This drum is a pair with 1995.64.10.

Each Lagoon peer group marked its ascent from youth to adulthood by acquiring a fokwe mi. These monumental drums were the focus of rites of passage that dramatized the transfer of power from one generation to the next. While a rising cohort might commission its own instrument from a specialist, age-mates might alternatively steal the drum of a more senior cohort. Played at an angle because of its exaggerated height, a fokwe mi issues a deep, resonant voice that signals an ancestral presence. Here a rhythmically incised surface has been enhanced by the application of white kaolin. The chevron "warrior" motif, called sagohin, and stool-like base signify the collective power of the emerging age-grade, itself represented through a ring of tsuan huen (carved heads).

Fokwe mi drum, Eastern Lagoons artist, Wood, kaolin, Lagoon peoples

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