Fish Mask

Description

Among the Bwa, families and lineages have special relationships with nature spirits and ancestors. Such beings are embodied through masquerades that reenact mythic events. In performance, an elderly man carrying a fish net pursues the fish mask shown here. The fish allows the man to capture it, sacrificing itself for the survival of its human counterpart. In contrast, the dwarf mask [see 2000.313] is performed only by the Bondé family and is much smaller in scale than the average Bwa mask. It honors an ancestor who was famed for his knowledge and abilities in the wilderness. As he lay dying, he asked to be remembered with a mask carved to his size.

Provenance

John J. Klejman (died 1995), J.J. Klejman Gallery, New York, N.Y., by 1958; sold to the Art Institute, 1958.

Fish Mask

Bwa

Late 19th/early 20th century

Accession Number

7485

Medium

Wood and pigment

Dimensions

113.1 × 16.6 × 19.1 cm (44 1/2 × 6 1/2 × 7 1/2 in.)

Classification

masks

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Mrs. Chauncey B. Borland Fund