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BAMANA Boli Altar Figure
A massive amorphous Bamana boli (19th C., 60 cm) from Mali — a zoomorphic figure resembling a hippopotamus or bovine, completely entombed in a thick cracked heavily textured crust of blackened organic matter, the underlying wooden armature entirely concealed by an overwhelming sacrificial patina.
1. The Formless Power of Nyama
The Boli (plural Boliw) represents the most potent and feared spiritual object in Bamana culture.
- Defying Categorization: Unlike traditional African sculpture seeking recognizable human or animal form, the boli intentionally defies aesthetic categorization — prioritizing sheer mass and the accumulation of nyama (spiritual life force).
- Additive Scaffold: The underlying armature of wood, bark, and roots is merely a scaffold — the true art of the boli is its additive construction, engineered to be visually grotesque and overwhelmingly powerful.
2. The Kono and Komo Societies
Boliw are the exclusive property of the highest echelons of Bamana male secret societies — specifically the Komo and Kono.
- Literal Altars and Judges: These objects serve as the literal altars and supreme judges of the community — housed in secret dark sanctuaries.
- Released Nyama in Crisis: When the village faces severe crisis (drought, witchcraft, war), the society elders sacrifice to the boli asking it to release its stored nyama to destroy enemies or restore cosmic balance — the boli is considered a living breathing entity that dictates the laws of the society.
3. 19th-Century Sacrificial Encrustation
The 19th-century dating of this 60 cm behemoth is visually proven by the staggering thickness of its crust.
- Decades of Coagulated Offerings: The carapace is manufactured from decades of coagulated animal blood, chewed kola nuts, millet porridge, and mud.



