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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Dan Wooden Mask with Cloth Hood, 20th Century CE

Dan Wooden Mask with Cloth Hood, 20th Century CE

Wood, Textile, Shell
10 x 26
X.1024A
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This outstanding hooded mask was made by the Dan group. It is a remarkable example of its type. It has a very tall, broad apex, widening to the cheekbones and...
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This outstanding hooded mask was made by the Dan group. It is a remarkable example of its type. It has a very tall, broad apex, widening to the cheekbones and narrowing to a pointed chin. The forehead is high and domed, running down to wide, circular eyes under sharp brows, a broad, flat nose and a prominent mouth. The patination is superb. The apex of the piece is marked with a band of cowrie shells that give way to a tall headdress to which is attached – and also to the mask – a striped earth-tones cloth which would effectively have hidden the features of the wearer.
The Dan are a farming tribe, settled in the semi- wooded areas of Liberia and the ivory Coast. While beholden to agriculture, much of their mythology and social structure is based upon the forest and its fiercer creatures – the Leopard Society is the main organ of social control. For example, initiates spend up to four months alone in the forest before they are permitted to enter maturity.
They are one of the most prolific masking groups in Africa, as there was scarcely a social function that did not have its own mask prior to the 1960s. For example, there are masks for fire-watching (= fire warden), adjudicators, warriors, debt collectors, social delinquents and warriors, and others for enlisting workers to clear paths, to catch runaway wives, to snatch feast food to serve to children and even for spying. Small “passport” masks were kept as talismans of good luck, and also served as markers of authority and ambassadorial functions. Masks were inherited through lineages, kept on altars and endowed with libations; they achieve their dark colour through immersion in black mud sacred materials. Some retain traces of what are presumed to be the remains of magical substances.
Function is not always easy to ascertain, paradoxically, as the masks were usually associated with costumes that have not survived, and with particular occasions, dances or people. This is the first such example that we have seen, and it appears to be a “gunyege” mask. These were worn by a sprinter and pursued by unmasked initiates. Once caught, he had to surrender the mask and the capturer would wear it and be pursued. They were somewhat vigorous pursuits, designed to train the men to fight.
These masks are the most elegant and impressive of the Dan repertoire. This is a superb example of a rare and beautiful form.
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