Through the inspired sculptural creations of master carvers, the
deceased leaders of Hemba chiefdoms remained vitally present to their
successors until the mid-twentieth century. This work belongs to that
corpus of visual tributes to princely subjects from communities situated
across the vast grass plains extending from the right bank of the Upper
Zaire River to a branch of the Luika. Originally enshrined within
darkened ancestral mausoleums positioned centrally within the community,
where they were cared for by its living leadership, these profoundly
contemplative figures signify their preoccupation with concerns of
transcendent significance. Among the paradoxes of this artistic genre is
that, despite the lengths to which Hemba masters strove to produce
rarefied and nuanced likenesses, their achievements were generally
removed from the line of vision of ordinary mortals. Instead, the
originally intended audience for their idealized perfection was
otherworldly.
The authors of Hemba ancestor figures typically focused on the bodily
passages of the head and torso, whose respective epicenters are the eyes
and navel. This male figure stands with hands held at either side. The
gaze was privileged among all other senses as the principal means for
visually acquiring knowledge, or ubatizha, a means of learning
in-depth about a person, thing, or event through observation. This
princely figure's eyes are closed and his expression deeply
contemplative. The eyes are raised, semi-circular forms below the arc of
the brow, the nose narrow at the bridge with flared nostrils; the
semi-circular form of the raised lips is echoed by the beard that
extends around the contour of the chin. While highly symmetrical, the
head is turned ever so slightly. The summit of the head is crowned by an
elaborate openwork coiffure. Such highly labor-intensive constructions
reflected the wearer's ethnicity and elevated rank.
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
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