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Gathered in situ (3) African art gallery (1) B. Berete Collection (1) Claude Renard collection, BE (1) Dr. Kremer Collection, Switzerland (1) Franco Maria Ricci, Italy (1) François C. Bazelaire, painter and sculptor, Bruxelles (2) Jean-Marc Desaive, African Art expert, Belgium (1) Jean-Pierre Schmidt Collection (4) Martial Bronsin, African Tribal Art expert, Bruxelles (1) Parmentier family Collection (1) Pierre Loos, Art Africain Expert, Belgium (3) Soubry family collection, BE (1) Tribal art collection Belgium (22) Tribal art collection France (1) Tribal Art Collection Germany (2) Tribal Art Collection Italy (1) Tribal Art Collection Luxembourg (1) Tribal Art Collection Portugal (1)
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A century of African art: the Soubry family collection
Masks in African Tribal Art
Lega: Art at the service of ancestors and initiation
Masks
The use of masks in african art
Masks, with figures, are the most famous pieces of art that come from tribal art. A lot of tribes accross the continent created these items and their complexity is as large as their diversity. They can be very small like the passeport masks made to identify a person (Chokwe), or very large to be carried on the shoulders like the Demba Nimba and Sukwava masks (Mende and Mumuye). Initiatory masks also exist like the ones made by Yaka and Suku people, or the famous small masks from the Bwami society of the Lega in Congo. African tribal masks can also be related to the spirits of Nature or surnatural forces like the Baule and Yaure believe in. As to the style of these artworks, the faces can be very realistic and refined like the Baule faces or very stylized and raw like the Dogon or Lobi carvers do.
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- Origin: Gathered in situ