Product Description
Mambila Tadep Figure – Cameroon
This unique figure is the prime example art Mambila, easily identifiable with their heart-shaped faces. The Tadep statues in the Mambila were used for therapeutic purposes.
Made of 100% wood, pigments
Model is W 34 – H 18 and weight 0.5 kg.
Description
The work reproduced here is the prime example art Mambila. The Tadep statues in the Mambila were used for therapeutic purposes. It is composed of various substances and sacrificial material “Spine” of “Wooden Heart” stuck on his head. Despite their small numbers, the 30,000 Mambila (or Mambilla, Mambere, Nor, Torbi, Lagubi, Tagbo, Tongbo, Bang, Ble, Juli, Bea) have established a large number of masks and Easily identifiable statues with their heart-shaped faces. Realized according to the same canons, these statues have a crusty patina, Small inserts on the head designate the worked hairstyle.
Mambila art centers upon an association called suaga. It is primarily concerned with justice and supernatural cleansing within the community. The Mambila produced a considerable number of figures that are characterized by a heart-shaped face, almond eyes; pigments are often applied later. Mambila figures embody ancestors who, according to their beliefs, are responsible for the clan’s wealth. The figures appear with bent legs and typical enlarged head outlined in wooden pegs. Mambila also make highly stylized animal masks. Masks and statues were kept hidden from the eyes of women in a net hung on the inside of a hut that was on stilts; it was guarded by the head of the family.
The 25,000 Mambila, farmers and stockbreeders, occupy the region bordering Cameroon and Nigeria, to the north of Grassland. Land, every family’s property, is distributed by the group’s chief. A society of mutual assistance, the kurum, participates in clearing land, harvesting, and building houses and facilitates social contacts during celebrations and dances. The men are in charge of weaving cotton, metal- and woodworking, and braiding fiber. Merchants and blacksmiths are separated from the rest of the community. The trade is passed from father to son. They practice the ancestor cult and agrarian rites. The Mambila only worshipped family ancestors. According to their beliefs, at one’s death the ancestors take away the soul of the deceased during the night. The chiefs of the lineage were buried in granaries, for they are representative of prosperity and life, just as the grains of millet.
Additional information
Weight | 0.5 kg |
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Dimensions | 34 × 18 cm |
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