Baule Metal Mother With Bread 2024 African Art 140027

$125.00
#SN.2090178
Baule Metal Mother With Bread 2024 African Art 140027, PRODUCT DETAILS + Type of Object - Figure + Country of Origin - Côte.
Black/White
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  • Chalk/Grove
  • Black/White
  • Magnet Fossil
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Product code: Baule Metal Mother With Bread 2024 African Art 140027

PRODUCT DETAILS

+ Type of Object - Figure
+ Country of Origin - Côte d'Ivoire
+ People - Baule
+ Materials - Iron or brass (unknown metal)
+ Height (in) - 7
+ Width (in) - 3
+ Depth (in) - 3
+ Overall Condition - Good. Most of our pieces have spent decades on at least two continents, and have been treasured by several owners.   Small splits, scrapes and cracks are a normal part of their patina attesting to their age and extensive use.  We examine each piece carefully when we receive it and report any damage we find in our listings.  Please look carefully at the pictures which may also reveal condition and damage.

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

Additional Information:The Baule people is one of the largest ethnic group in the Côte d'Ivoire. They have played a central role in twentieth-century history of the country. They waged the longest war of resistance to French colonization of any West African people, and maintained their traditional objects and beliefs longer than many groups in such constant contact with European administrators, traders, and missionaries. The Baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. According to a legend, during the eighteenth century, the queen, Abla Poku, had to lead her people west to the shores of the Comoe, the land of Senufo. In order to cross the river, she sacrificed her own son. This sacrifice was the origin of the name Baule, for baouli means “the child has died.” Now 2024 about one million Baule occupy a part of the eastern Côte d'Ivoire between the Komoé and Bandama rivers that is both forest and savanna land. Baule society was characterized by extreme individualism, great tolerance, a deep aversion toward rigid political structures, and a lack of age classes, initiation, circumcision, priests, secret societies, or associations with hierarchical levels. Each village was independent from the others and made its own decisions under the presiding presence of a council of elders. Everyone participated in discussions, including slaves. It was an egalitarian society. The Baule compact villages are divided into wards, or quarters, and subdivided into family compounds of rectangular dwellings arranged around a courtyard; the compounds are usually aligned on either side of the main village street.



SKU: 140027

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