Product Description
Idoma Igbo Seated Figure, Nigeria
Made of 100% Terracotta
Model is W 18 – H 47 and D 14 weight 7 kg
This sculpture originates from the Igbo peoples, from southern Eastern Nigeria, near a small river called Benue. The tribe is linked to the Idoma. The sculpture is depicting a male seating on what seems to be a royal stool. Seated statues are believed to incarnate fertility, a frequent theme in the region. They help cure illness, and help in reproduction, and fertility. The male figure must have been a royal, a merchant or a trader.
Seated statues are believed to incarnate fertility, a frequent theme in the region. They cure illnesses, and help in reproduction, and fertility. There is strong social pressure toward individual distinction, and men can move upward through successive grades by demonstrating their achievements and their generosity.
Description
This sculpture originates from the Igbo people, southern Eastern Nigeria, near a small river called Benu. The tribe is linked to the Idoma. The sculpture is depicting a male seating on what seems to be an elaborately designed royal stool; The male figure must have been a royal, a merchant or a trader. He is wearing a small black hat on top of a rounded face, blackened eyes, triangular nose, incised eyebrows, colored lips, and hollowed ears, or might seems to be earrings, with incision of two lines on both sides of the face. The face seats on a very long cylindrical neck, adorned by a collar or what seems to be a jewelry. The entire face and body is pigmented, he is wearing a collar or a piece of jewelry around its neck, two currency bracelets on both arms, and three ankle bracelets. The figure is holding what seems to be a mixing bowl. He is wearing an attire or type of breechclout around its waist and a protection around his member. Seated statues are believed to incarnate fertility, a frequent theme in the region. They cure illnesses, and help in reproduction, and fertility. There is a strong social pressure toward individual distinction, and men can move upward through successive grades by demonstrating their achievements and their generosity.
The Igbo believed to be living in a forested area, Southwest Nigeria, on both sides of the Niger River. They are mainly farmers and merchants, they also hunt and fish. They are subdivided into thirty-three subgroup spread out into two hundred villages, scattered through the thick forest or semifertile marshland. They share linguistic ties with their neighbors, the Bini, Igala, Yoruba, and Idoma, a split between them probably occurred 5000-6000 years ago. The heads of families form the council of elders, which shares its power with numerous secret societies. These societies exercise great political and social influence. They are highly hierarchical, their members passing from one level to the next. Only on the northern and western edges of the area, under influence from Igala and Benin, are hereditary rulers found.
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