Helmet Mask (Kono Kun)

Description

Led by griots (musicians/storytellers) with an ability to mediate spiritual energy, the name Kono designates one of several Bamana power associations—organizations restricted by age and profession. This type of helmet mask, locally known as Kono kun (Kono head), is danced to control antisocial behavior. Stored in a shrine when not performed, the mask’s carved features and real animal attachments such as horns and quills create a composite entity whose powers derive from the natural world it references.

Provenance

Unknown private collector, Belgium, from late 1960s [conversation with P. Leloup dated Jan. 30, 1997, documented in curatorial file]; sold to Philippe Leloup and Hélène (ex-Kamer) Leloup, Arts Primitifs, Paris, by 1996 [acquisition documentation in curatorial file]; sold to the Art Institute, 1997.

Helmet Mask (Kono Kun)

Bamana

Early to mid-20th century

Accession Number

146935

Medium

Wood, horn, quills, and sacrificial material

Dimensions

22.9 × 103.5 × 28.6 cm (9 × 40 3/4 × 11 1/4 in.)

Classification

masks

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Through prior gifts of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Chapman, Dr. H. Van de Waal; through prior acquisitions of the Robert A. Waller Fund