This study of the wooden Serpent figures/headdresses of the Baga
people of Guinea is a collaboration by the author, as an art
historian, with many contributions from diverse perspectives,
including scientists preeminent in their fields, Robert J.
Koestler, Roy Sieber, Dennis William Stevenson, Mark T. Wypyski,
and Peter J. Zanzucchi. The text begins with a thorough exploration
of the ethnological and art historical evidence for the Serpent
masquerade among the Baga of Guinea, bearing an immense wooden
serpent figure on top of the head representing a python. Never
witnessed or photographed by an outsider, it disappeared in the
1950s along with most ritual performance after an Islamic jihad
instated strict prohibitions against indigenous religions. The
ritual context is followed by an in-depth analysis of the Serpent
masquerade figures now extant in collections in Europe, the
Americas, and Africa, as well as other representations of the
python in the ritual art of the region. The final sections
present the arguments, as a debate, between interested persons in
the arts, including art historians, dealers, appraisers,
collectors, and curators, and the scientific examinations by
specialists in botany, chemistry, physics, entomology, and
conservation concerning one particular Serpent figure in question.
General
Imprint: |
Five Continents Editions
|
Country of origin: |
Italy |
Release date: |
November 2023 |
Authors: |
Frederick John Lamp
|
Dimensions: |
285 x 240mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
400 |
ISBN-13: |
979-1-254-60044-3 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
XC2-PR6-UFU-2 |
Barcode: |
9791254600443 |
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