Douglas Yaney Gallery
African Tribal Art - Haitian Paintings

Home Page

Contact Us
Purchasing Information
Museum Quality African Art

African Tribal Masks
African Tribal Figures
African Tribal Utilitarian Objects

  • Yoruba tribe, Gelede Society mask, Nigeria
    Wood, pigment

  • 11"  x  7 1/2" x 5" 
    Circa:
    late 19th century, early 20th century  shows much use and age - photo by request

  • #y2330-20

  • $6595  Click here for  payment information and shipping quote using item #.

  • Note: Sotheby's auction house in New York recently sold a Gelede mask
    for $842,500 USD.

    Additional photos available on request. Be sure to reference stock number for this item

Watch Gelede Dance video, click here


 

The Gelede is performed by the Yoruba-Nago community that is spread over Benin, Nigeria and Togo. For more than a century, this ceremony has been performed to pay tribute to the primordial mother Iyà Nlà and to the role women play in the process of social organization and development of Yoruba society.
The Gelede takes place every year after the harvests, at important events and during drought or epidemics and is characterized by carved masks, dances and chants, sung in the Yoruba language and retracing the history and myths of the Yoruba-Nago people. The ceremony usually takes place at night on a public square and the dancers prepare in a nearby house. The singers and the drummers are the first to appear. They are accompanied by an orchestra and followed by the masked dancers wearing splendid costumes. There is a great deal of preparatory craftwork involved, especially mask carving and costume making. The performances convey an oral heritage that blends epic and lyric verses, which employ a good deal of irony and mockery, supported by satirical masks. Figures of animals are often used, such as the serpent, a symbol of power, or the bird, the messenger of the mothers. The community is divided into groups of men and women led by a male and a female head. It is the only known masked society, which is also governed by women. Although the Gelede has nowadays adapted to a more patriarchal society, the oral heritage and dances can be considered as a testimony of the former matriarchal order.
Technical development is resulting in a gradual loss of traditional know-how, and tourism is jeopardizing the Gelede by turning it into a folklore product. Nevertheless, the Gelede community shows great awareness of the value of their intangible heritage, which is reflected in the efforts put into the preparation work and in the growing number of participants.
Country(ies): Benin; Nigeria; Togo
Reprinted from: UNESCO: Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity - 2008