Sgabello cerimoniale con cariatide

ca. 1840–1870
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 344
Tra i beni più preziosi dei capi Luba ci sono gli scanni riccamente scolpiti sostenuti da cariatidi, considerati parte integrante della cerimonia di investitura durante la quale ricevevano il diritto di comandare. I Luba stabiliscono successione ed eredità in linea di discendenza materna; quindi le figure di cariatidi scolpite sui sedili reali raffigurano le donne antenate a garantire un sostegno simbolico per i capi. Questo sgabello cerimoniale è stato attribuito al maestro di Buli, tra gli artisti africani più noti prima della colonizzazione europea di quella regione. Lo stile altamente espressivo dello scultore è evidente nei tratti allungati della figura, negli zigomi pronunciati e nell’intensità con cui manifesta le emozioni.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Titolo: Sgabello cerimoniale con cariatide
  • Artista: Il maestro di Buli, forse Ngongo ya Chintu (ca. 1810-1870)
  • Data: XIX secolo
  • Area geografica: Hemba, Repubblica democratica del Congo
  • Materiale e tecnica: Legno, perni metallici
  • Dimensioni: Alt. 61 cm
  • Crediti: Acquistato, donazioni di Buckeye Trust e Charles B. Benenson, Rogers Fund e fondi di vari benefattori, 1979
  • Numero d'inventario: 1979.29
  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

Audio

Disponibile solo in: English
Cover Image for 1595. Lupona (royal seat), Ngongo ya Chintu

1595. Lupona (royal seat), Ngongo ya Chintu

Alison Saar

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ANGELIQUE KIDJO (NARRATOR): The royal seat is held by a woman with powerful, exaggerated hands. Her eyes are downturned, her face a picture of melancholic reflection and resilience.

ALISON SAAR: What’s really beautiful about this piece is how she’s supporting upon her head and shoulders the weight of the chief. It feels that without her support, it would all sort of crumble and cease to exist.

My name is Alison Saar. I’m an artist working in sculpture that is influenced and informed by the African diaspora.

It’s always really incredible for me to see these works as a sculptor working in wood primarily myself. It’s truly a collaboration between the artist and the material, in terms of how far you can push it and what the wood will allow itself to be formed into.

ANGELIQUE KIDJO: When viewed in profile, you can see one of the most ornate and important aspects of the sculpture: the woman’s elaborate hairstyle.

ALISON SAAR: You know, for me, hair kind of tells the story. I think being biracial and looking very white and having curly hair, I felt like that was one of the things that really connected me to my African American ancestry through my mother’s family.

And to see how prominent hair and hairstyles were in the work of the Luba was really fascinating. Hairstyles will tell how many children a woman has or whom she’s married to or what her class is and what her ancestry is—these hairstyles tell stories and have really significant meaning in the community.

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