One of the most fascinating artistic phenomena in tropical
Africa, mbari houses are little known outside Igboland. Art
historian Herbert M. Cole has drawn from his extensive research in
eastern Nigeria to produce the first book-length study of this
unusual art form. Cole describes the building of a mbari mud house
to honor the gods, a process rich in tradition and ritual, marked
by body painting, drumming, dancing, singing, and chanting. The
ecology, socio-cultural systems, and religion of the Owerri area
are examined as a backdrop to the elaborate stage of the building
process, which may take up to two years to complete.
Illustrated with rare field photographs and superb line
drawings, this volume describes and interprets mbari houses not as
isolated works of art but as monuments growing out of, and
expressive of, the values and beliefs of Owerri Igbo culture.
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