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YORUBA Edun Monkey Figure (Reckitt's Blue)
A dynamic Yoruba Edun monkey figure (1st half 20th C., 32 cm) from Nigeria — a crouching or seated monkey holding a small object to its snout with both hands. Classic Yoruba carved facial features, dramatically painted with bright blue pigment on the lower body and stark white kaolin on the upper face, showing a dry aged surface.
1. The Edun Motif and Zoomorphic Portraiture
In Yoruba culture, the Colobus monkey (Edun) is a creature of intense mythological significance.
- Human Aesthetic on Animal Body: The artist has not carved a realistic primate — instead applying the classical Yoruba human aesthetic (large bulging almond-shaped eyes, stylized blocky jaw) to a zoomorphic subject.
- Kinetic Crouching Silhouette: The crouching posture, hands drawn tightly to the mouth in an act of eating or whispering, creates a tense silhouette that perfectly embodies the hyperactive mischievous nature of the monkey.
2. Ibeji Twins and the Divine Trickster
This figure is deeply tied to the Yoruba veneration of twins (Ere Ibeji).
- Patron Animal of Twins: According to Yoruba cosmology, the Edun monkey is the patron animal and spiritual guardian of twins — placed on domestic altars alongside carved Ibeji statues to appease deceased twin spirits and prevent misfortune.
- Association with Esu: The monkey's mischievous nature strongly associates it with Esu — the divine trickster and messenger of the gods, who demands constant feeding and appeasement.
3. Polychrome Degradation and Reckitt's Blue
The vibrant pigmentation is a phenomenal historical marker of the early-to-mid 20th century.
- Imported Sacred Pigment: The intense blue is derived from "Reckitt's Blue" — an imported European washing powder rapidly adopted by Yoruba artists as a sacred high-status pigment, often substituting for traditional indigo.



