EUR

FR   EN   中文

CONNECTION
A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure
A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure  - Tribal Art Style A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure  - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure  - Antiquités - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure
Ref : 116294
28 500 €
Period :
20th century
Provenance :
Kongo Peoples, Democratic Republic of Congo
Medium :
Wood, metal, cloth, nails, glass
Dimensions :
H. 12.99 inch
Tribal Art  - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure 20th century - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure  - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure Antiquités - A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure
Finch and Co

Antiquities, Ethnographic, European Sculture


+447768236921
+32470644651
A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure

A Powerful Kongo Fetish Figure
Wood, metal, cloth, nails, glass
Areas of dark, black lacquered patina, worn through from use
The cavity to the stomach now empty
Kongo Peoples, Democratic Republic of Congo
Early 20th Century

Provenance:
Ex collection Dave Dhal, Oregon, USA
Ex Private collection, Los Angeles, USA
Ex Mark Eglinton Tribal Art, New York, USA
Ex Private English collection

Sacred medicines and divine protection are central to the belief of the Kongo peoples (Democratic Republic of Congo). The Kongo believe that the great god, Ne Kongo, brought the first sacred medicine (or nkisi) down from heaven in an earthenware vessel set upon three stones or termite mounds. A nkisi (plural: minkisi) which loosely translates, as a ‘spirit’, yet it is represented as a container of sacred substances which are activated by supernatural forces that can be summoned into the physical world. Visually, these ‘minkisi’ can be as simple as pottery or vessels containing medicinal herbs and other elements determined to be beneficial in curing physical illness or alleviating social ills. In other instances, ‘minkisi’ can be represented as small bundles, shells, and carved wooden figures. ‘Minkisi’ represent the ability to both ‘contain’ and ‘release’ spiritual forces, which can have both positive and negative consequences on the community.
‘Nkisi nkondi’ figures are highly recognisable through an accumulation of pegs, blades, nails, or other sharp objects inserted into its surface. Medicinal combinations called ‘bilongo’ are sometimes stored in the head of the figure but frequently in the belly of the figure, which is shielded by a piece of glass, mirror, or other reflective surface (now missing). The glass represents the ‘other world’ inhabited by the spirits of the dead, who can peer through and see potential enemies. Elements with a variety of purposes are contained within the ‘bilongo’. Seeds may be inserted to tell a spirit to replicate itself; ‘mpemba’ or white soil deposits found near cemeteries represent and enlist support from the spiritual realm. Claws may incite the spirits to grasp something, while stones may activate the spirits to pelt enemies or protect one from being pelted.

Delevery information :

Please email for details
Shipping can be arranged worldwide

Finch and Co

CATALOGUE

Tribal Art