GONGOLI MASKS ARCHIVES, Liberia

The mask below has been sold and is left here for reference and educational purposes.

For UNSOLD Gongoli masks GO TO GONGOLI MASKS PAGE

Photographs © Hamill  Gallery

GONGOLI MASKS, Liberia

This maskhas been vetted as authentic with signs of age and use.

"Standing two feet high, with ungainly jutting ears, puffed-out cheeks, and grimacing teeth, this mask from the Mende people is not pretty. But prettiness was not the goal of the mask's carver. Rather, this mask, customarily worn with a costume of dead leaves and rags, intentionally challenges the standards of beauty in society. The jolting and awkward dance performed with the mask represents the ugliest and most ridiculous aspects of human nature, forcing the audience to confront both what is aesthetically and emotionally challenging." 

Yale University Art Gallery

"The Gongoli mask performed as a comic figure at village celebrations. Unlike other Mende masked characters which are silent, Gongoli speaks in a gravelly voice, mocking the chief and village elders. The mask has no sacred affiliations and can be carved and danced by anyone. Raffia, metal, white clay, red ocher and enamel are included in the materials used on this mask. Three 'tear' marks on either cheek act simultaneously as scarification andas viewing holes for the dancer."

Artists and Patrons in Traditional African Cultures
African Sculpture from the Gary Schulze Collection

From the exhibition originally held at the QCC Art Gallery in 2005, Queensborough Community College, New York

With thanks to Rand African Art

 

GO TO GONGOLI MASKS PAGE

RETURN TO AFRICAN MASKS, VARIOUS TRIBES, PAGE

GO TO OF SPECIAL INTEREST PAGE

GO TO MASKS OF THE DAN EXHIBITION PAGE

GO TO AFRICAN MASKS PAGE

GO TO NEW ADDITIONS PAGE

 

HOMEPAGE

 Index by
TRIBE

 Index by
OBJECT

CONTACT US