Female Horizontal-Style Chi Wara Headdress
Dublin Core
Title
Female Horizontal-Style Chi Wara Headdress
Creator
Bamana Culture
Creator Biography
before 1974
Culture
Bamana Culture
Place Made
West Africa
Description
The Chi Wara is most commonly depicted as a part-human, part-antelope creature, and the most common style is the Chi Wara. This style of Chi Wara is the horizontal Chi Wara. This Chiwara also usually incorporates human and antelope features, but its horns are horizontal and tend to curve upward at the tips. The figure is also usually carved from two pieced of wood. This style of Chi Wara tends to be more stylized, with an enlarged head: it ma also incorporate other parts of animals, and a baby Chi Wara figure may be represented only by its horns, as on the Stoneman collection horizontal Chi Wara. Horizontal-style Chi Wara later developed into a very abstracted form that is even more complex and stylized, incorporating as many as three digging animals, such as the antelope, the aardvark, and the pangolin or armored ant eater. The use of the Chi Wara headdress has changed and developed over time. Most recently it has become the headdress danced by the winner of agricultural competitions, and it is used in entertainment masquerades.
Researched by heather Nelson, MSU Student, 2011, Under the direction of Dr. Billie Follensbee
Researched by heather Nelson, MSU Student, 2011, Under the direction of Dr. Billie Follensbee
Century
20th Century
Item Dimensions
26 cm h. x 9 cm w. x 156 cm d.
Medium
Sculpture
Techniques
Carved Design
Provenance
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stoneman
Acession Number
1985.17
Accession Year
1985
Photo Number
20200035 and 20200036