Male Figure (nkishi)

Description

This figure's visual impact and workmanship suggest that an extended family––rather than an individual––used it. The raffia skirt around the waist and the blue and white beads are indicators of leadership. The metal appliqué covering the face and the metal blades that hedge the headgear refer to the blacksmith, a culture hero celebrated in a Songye myth narrating the formation of the state. The metal strips on the skeletal face are said to relate to lightning, signaling the figure's role as a powerful anti-sorcerer, but the contrast between white iron and red copper symbolically alludes to the ambivalent powers of the figure.

Provenance

(Galerie Moderne, Brussels, Belgium, sold to René and Odette Delenne) (1958); René [1901-1998] and Odette [1925-2012] Delenne, Brussels, Belgium (1958-2010); René and Odette Delenne, Brussels, Belgium, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art (2010); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2010-)

Male Figure (nkishi)

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late 1800s–early 1900s

Accession Number

2010.451

Medium

Wood, glass beads, brass (including upholstery studs), copper alloy, iron alloy, raffia, reedbuck antelope horn, rawhide, animal hair, human teeth, organic material, minerals, and plant fibers

Dimensions

Overall: 64 x 24.5 x 24 cm (25 3/16 x 9 5/8 x 9 7/16 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

René and Odette Delenne Collection, Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund