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Punu-Lumbo mask

Tribal mask native to Gabon

Punu-Lumbo mask

Tribal mask native to Gabon

A Punu-Lumbo mask

A Punu-Lumbo mask is a tribal mask native to the Ogooué River basin in Gabon, especially in the south in Ngounié Province. The masks are extremely valuable to collectors of African art, and have been sold at Sotheby's for well over $400,000. The earliest known example, collected in 1867, is part of the Pitt Rivers Museum collection at the University of Oxford. Several other museums, such as the National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. are in possession of one. They have been featured in the African Negro Art show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City (1935), and at the Museum voor Volkenkunde, in Rotterdam (1953). The masks were popular among European collectors during the 1920s and 1930s.

Design

Compared stylistically to Japanese art, the masks are typically oval in shape, with narrowed eyes, arched eyebrows and small ears. The male masks (ikwar) tend to be brown and black pigment over kaolin and viewed as ugly and are shown at night whilst the masks for females (mukudj) tend to be lighter and considered prettier by the locals and are shown in the day. The Okuyi (or mokuyi) white-faced masks commonly contain nine scale-like patterns on the forehead. This is said to be a "central eye" and also a flowering tree. The white color, usually derived from kaolin, represents clarity, light, and beauty.

Use

Male dancers are known to wear the Okuyi while dancing. The white-faced masks are also used by other Gabon and Zaire rainforest people, such as the Kotas and Mpongwe, The Ashira also share in the white-faced mask tradition, which includes soft facial characteristics. The masks have been linked to the Mukui society and to female ancestor celebration dances, a funerary spirit association. A variation of the Punu-Lumbo mask is produced by the Tsangui in the northern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

References

References

  1. Musée Barbier-Mueller. Association des amis. (2005). "Arts and Cultures". The Association of Friends of the Barbier-Mueller Museum.
  2. "A Magnificent Punu-Lumbo Mask, Gabon". [[Sotheby's]].
  3. Teuten, Timothy. (28 April 1995). "The collector's guide to masks". Bracken.
  4. (2007). "Tribal: the magazine of tribal art". Primedia, Inc..
  5. (1988). "Expressions of belief: masterpieces of African, Oceanic, and Indonesian art from the Museum voor Volkenkunde, Rotterdam". Rizzoli.
  6. (1986). "African sculpture from The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania". Philadelphia Museum of Art.
  7. JSTOR (Organization). (1 January 2001). "African Arts". African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles.
  8. Dunne, Claire. (4 July 2002). "Carl Jung: Wounded Healer of the Soul: An Illustrated Biography". Continuum International Publishing Group.
  9. African Studies Center. (1 January 2001). "African arts". University of California, Los Angeles.
  10. Werness, Hope B.. (20 March 2003). "The Continuum Encyclopedia of Native Art: Worldview, Symbolism, and Culture in Africa, Oceania, and North America". Continuum International Publishing Group.
  11. Sathisan, Dinesh. (March–April 2011). "The Ideal Beauty of the Punu Okuyi". Passage.
  12. Hollingsworth, Mary. (2004). "Art in World History". Giunti Editore.
  13. (1998). "The visual arts of Africa: gender, power, and life cycle rituals". Prentice Hall.
  14. (November 3, 1998). "Punu Information". University of Iowa.
  15. "Exhibition: Beyond the Eye of the Beholder: Ideals of Human Beauty in Africa and the Americas". The Israel Museum.
  16. (2001). "African and Oceanic art in Jerusalem: the Israel Museum collection". Israel Museum.
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