Body mask. Urama River area, Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea, 20th century.
Woven, braided and pigmented plant fiber.
Provenance: collected in situ by George J. Craig before 1970.
Good general state of preservation: wear, losses, irregularities and alterations typical of organic materials, consistent with its ceremonial use and age.
Measurements: 210 x 93 x 47 cm.
Open live auction
Processing lot please standbyBID HISTORY
DESCRIPTION
Body mask. Urama River area, Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea, 20th century.
Woven, braided and pigmented plant fiber.
Provenance: collected in situ by George J. Craig before 1970.
Good general state of preservation: wear, losses, irregularities and alterations typical of organic materials, consistent with its ceremonial use and age.
Measurements: 210 x 93 x 47 cm.
Imposing body mask from the Urama River area, in the Gulf of Papua, one of the most significant areas of oceanic ceremonial art. Made of vegetable fiber, it adopts a full-body anthropozoomorphic form, with a head with animal features, open mouth, side arms and a wide enveloping structure designed to completely transform the presence of the wearer during the rite.
The interweaving of fibers creates a vibrant surface of zigzag motifs, with alternating natural, white, ochre and black tones. This decoration runs around the body like a second ritual skin, integrating geometry, movement and spiritual presence. The lower vegetal appendages and the details of the head intensify its dynamic character, conceived to be activated in dance and not contemplated only as a static object.
The body masks of the Gulf of Papua are linked to ceremonies of initiation, transformation and contact with ancestral or totemic entities. Their use implied a true visual and symbolic metamorphosis: the human body disappeared under the vegetal architecture of the mask, giving way to a ceremonial presence associated with the spiritual world, lineage and collective identity.
Because of its monumental scale, technical complexity, provenance and extraordinary plastic force, this work is an outstanding example of Papua New Guinean ritual art. The combination of fiber, pigment, volume and movement places it within a ceremonial tradition of great ethnographic prestige, documented in important international museum collections and archives.
HELP
Bidding by Phone 932 463 241
Buy in Setdart
Sell in Setdart
Payments
Logistics
Remember that bids placed in the last few minutes may extend the end of the auction,
thus allowing enough time for other interested users to place their bids. Remember to refresh your browser in the last minutes of any auction to have all bidding information fully updated.
Also in the last 3 minutes, if you wish, you can place
consecutive bids to reach the reserve price.
Newsletter
Would you like to receive our newsletter?
Setdart sends, weekly and via e-mail, a newsletter with the most important news. If you have not yet requested to receive our newsletter, you can do so by filling in the following form.