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GURUNSI Elephant Tusk Trumpet (Crocodile Relief)
A spectacular Gurunsi ivory side-blown trumpet (1st half 20th C., 53 cm) from Burkina Faso — a hollowed elephant tusk featuring a high-relief carving of a crocodile / lizard spanning the inner curve and terminating in a sharp point, with intricate zig-zag motifs, exhibiting a deep buttery orange-brown patina. Part of a three-horn grouping (0437, 0438, 0439).
1. The Ultimate Material Prestige
In West Africa, ivory is the ultimate unassailable material symbol of royal prerogative, massive wealth, and lethal power.
- Zoomorphic Relief Mastery: While the accompanying Yoruba horns rely on sweeping natural curves, this Gurunsi piece is a masterpiece of zoomorphic relief.
- Crocodile of Two Worlds: The artist leverages the entire length of the tusk to carve a crocodile — a master of both land and water — symbolizing the chief's absolute dominion over the natural and spiritual worlds.
2. Acoustic Power of Kingship and Dominion
These side-blown horns were the acoustic engines of the royal court and the battlefield.
- Royal Retainer Blowing: Blown exclusively by highly trained royal retainers — announcing the approach of the chief, signaling war, or summoning spirits during major festivals.
- Voice of Command: The deep resonance of the ivory trumpet was equated to the voice of the ruler — unstoppable, ancient, and commanding absolute submission. The crocodile relief amplifies this by visually asserting the ruler's mastery over water spirits and riverine wealth.
3. Decades of Saturated Ivory Patination
The physical condition is breathtaking — the holy grail of ivory patination.
- Buttery Orange Absorption: Over the first half of the 20th century the porous ivory absorbed palm oil, shrine smoke, and the sweat and breath of musicians — transforming stark white bone into a deep lustrous buttery orange-brown.
- The side-blown embouchure shows extreme glass-like friction wear — irrefutable proof of decades of active ceremonial blowing.



