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ClassificationsAfrican Art

Mask (Nwamba)

Place CreatedBurkina Faso, Africa
Datemid 20th Century
Credit LineEx coll. William S. Arnett
Dimensions78 x 14 in. (198.1 x 35.6 cm)
Object number1999.003.058
Label TextFarming families of the southern Bwa people commission, make, and perform two types of masks. One type, of which this tall nwamba mask is an example, is made of wood. Masks of this category appear in a wide range of public performances, often alongside another Bwa mask type called bieni, which is made of more ephemeral materials such as vines, leaves, and feathers. Though both types of mask are used in the veneration of the nature spirit Do, only wooden masks are acquired for museum collections. This is because the bieni leaf masks are made on the day of the performance, constructed on the body of the performer and then ritually burned after the performance. The wooden nwamba masks are saved for future use and care is taken to preserve them. Every year, these masks are soaked in an herbal solution by their owners to prevent insect damage and repainted with geometric patterns that encode different meanings depending on the viewer and occasion.
Bieni represents the oldest Bwa masking practice. However, since they cannot be collected, it is the newer wooden mask that represents Bwa masking styles within museum collections.
Exhibition HistoryMCCM Permanent Collection Installation, March 2006 - March 13, 2007
MCCM Permanent Collection Installation, November 19, 2007 - December 1, 2014
MCCM Permanent Collection Installation, August 6, 2016 - Present
ProvenanceEx coll. William Arnett (1939-2020), Atlanta, Georgia.
Status
On view
Collections
  • African Art
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
Oba
mid 20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2010.
late 19th-early 20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2010.
early 19th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2010.
20th Century
© Bruce M. White, 2006.
20th Century
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
20th Century
© Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Photo by Michael McKelvey.
late 19th-early 20th Century