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BAMANA Konolo Granary Doorlock
A classic cross-shaped Bamana konolo doorlock (1st half 20th C., 30 cm) from Mali — a horizontal sliding crossbar and a vertical pillar, surmounted by a highly abstract minimalist diamond-shaped geometric head. The dense timber is deeply incised with cross-hatched patterns and is completely saturated with a dark oily heavily rubbed patina.
1. Architectural Security and the Konolo Form
The Bamana (Mande) people transform everyday security hardware into profound objects of sculptural and spiritual beauty.
- Vertical Beam as Ancestor: The heavy cross-shaped wooden armature is not merely functional — the vertical beam is deliberately carved to represent a stylized human or ancestral figure.
- Minimalist Geometric Head: The head is reduced to a sharp minimalist diamond, echoing the strict geometric reduction seen in monumental Bamana statuary — bringing elite sculptural principles to the domestic doorway.
2. Protecting the Granary and the Ancestral Watchman
These locks were primarily utilized to secure the heavy wooden doors of personal dwellings or, more importantly, the village granaries.
- Guardian of the Food Supply: In the harsh Sahelian environment, the granary holds the absolute lifeblood of the community — the carved figure represents an active vigilant ancestor or a powerful water spirit (Faro).
- Magical Labyrinth of Cross-Hatching: The deeply incised geometric cross-hatching serves as a magical labyrinth, intended to confuse and trap malevolent witchcraft before it can penetrate the door and corrupt the vital food supply.
3. Extreme Tactile Wear and Oily Saturation
The patina is the definition of functional ethnographic wear.
- Daily Sliding Crossbar Polish: Subjected to decades of continuous daily tactile interaction — the entire surface is saturated with a dark lustrous oily sheen transferred from sweaty oil-coated hands operating the sliding crossbar multiple times a day.



