African
Masks
The
Materials of an African Mask
African
masks are made from different materials: wood, bronze, brass, copper,
ivory, terra cotta and glazed pottery, raffia and textiles. They
are often decorated with cowrie shells, colored beads, bone, animal
skins and vegetable fibre.
However,
the majority of masks and sculptures are made of wood for two reasons:
1.
Trees are in plentiful supply in the forest.
2.
The carver believes that the tree has a spiritual soul and its wood
is the most natural home for the spirit
in the mask.
Before
it is cut down, a sacrifice may be offered as a mark of respect
to the spirit of the tree requesting its permission for the carving.
Its life is governed by the same natural and supernatural forces
that inspire the artist and his community. This type of ritual is
common to many cultures that have a close spiritual bond with nature.
Wooden
masks are often colored with natural dyes and pigments created
from vegetables, plants, seeds, tree bark, soil and insects. Occasionally
they are splashed with sacrificial blood to increase their spiritual
power.
The
tools used to make a carving - traditionally the Adze - are also
endowed with their own particular spirits. When tools are passed
down through different generations, they sometimes inherit the spirit
and skills of their previous owners. They, like the artist, his
carving, and the tree from which it came, are all part of that 'oneness'
of nature - the ecological vision that informs all African tribal
culture.
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