Headdress (chi wara)
early to mid-1900s
Maker Unknown
African Art
Headdress (chi wara), early to mid-1900s. Africa, West Africa, Mali, Bamana-style blacksmith-carver. Wood, cowrie shells, glass beads, possibly aluminum, iron alloy, upholstery studs, and natural fibers; overall: 44.5 x 66 cm (17 1/2 x 26 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Mrs. Ralph M. Coe in memory of Ralph M. Coe 1965.325 Chi wara—a mythical “farming beast”—was said to teach farming to the Bamana people. Carved patterns cover this female chi wara’s body, highlighting its muscles and emphasizing that it is no earthly animal, but rather an agricultural spirit that combines human, antelope, and anteater elements. This example wears earrings and a nose ring of imported metals and beads. Its carver—a blacksmith—used a naturalistic style common south of the city of Bamako. Accompanied by women’s songs, male performers danced paired male-and-female chi wara headdresses affixed to basketry caps at agricultural competitions and weddings.
- Maker/Artist
- Maker Unknown
- Classification
- Mask
- Formatted Medium
- Wood, cowrie shells, glass beads, possibly aluminum, iron alloy, upholstery studs, and natural fibers
- Medium
- wood, cowrie, shells, glass, beads, possibly, aluminum, iron, alloy, upholstery, studs, natural, fibers
- Dimensions
- Overall: 44.5 x 66 cm (17 1/2 x 26 in.)
- Departments
- African Art
- Accession Number
- 1965.325
- Credit Line
- Gift of Mrs. Ralph M. Coe in memory of Ralph M. Coe
- Exhibitions
- Year in Review: 1965, Artlens Exhibition 2017, Kansas City, MO, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art: The Imagination of Primitive Man: A Survey of the Arts of the Non-Literate Peoples of the World (1962), cat. no. 3.<br>CMA 1965: "Year in Review," Bulletin, LII (November 1965), p, 152, no. 22.
- Rights Statement
- CC0
- Museum Location
- 108A Sub-Saharan
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