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YAKA Headcrest Mask (Ndeemba)
An explosive Yaka Ndeemba multi-media crest mask (1st half 20th C., 60 cm) from DR Congo — a carved wooden face with the quintessential Yaka upturned nose, heavily painted with bold blue and white geometric patterns, surmounted by a towering complex superstructure of wood and canvas, the entire piece engulfed by a massive perfectly preserved collar of thick undyed raffia fibers.
1. Nkanda Polychrome and the Retroussé Nose
This spectacular mask is the defining emblem of the Yaka.
- Vital Arrogant Energy: Bulbous protruding eyes, open toothy mouth, and the signature dramatically upturned (retroussé) nose project an aura of vital arrogant energy.
- Reckitt's Blue Geometry: Stark white (kaolin) and vibrant blue (historically imported Reckitt's Blue washing powder) applied in alternating geometric bands create an incredibly dynamic high-contrast visual display — designed to be mesmerizing when spinning in the sunlight.
2. The Ndeemba Mask and the Return of the Men
This is an Ndeemba (or Kholuka) mask — the joyous triumphant centerpiece of the Nkanda initiation cycle.
- Post-Circumcision Celebration: After spending months isolated in harsh forest camps undergoing circumcision and rigorous education, young Yaka boys returned to the village as men.
- Spinning Spirit of Renewal: The massive mask, with its towering (often humorous or sexually suggestive) superstructure representing cosmological tales or mocking neighboring tribes, was danced to celebrate their return — the massive raffia collar completely concealed the dancer, transforming him into a towering colorful spinning spirit of fertility and renewed village life.
3. Pristine Fiber Preservation and Pigment Integrity
For an artifact composed primarily of delicate raffia, canvas, and natural pigments, preservation is phenomenal.
