Was uns das Objekt erzählt.
Gestützt auf Feldforschung, Museumsbestände und Fachliteratur — erzählt mit Respekt vor dem Kontext, in dem dieses Objekt entstand.
DOGON Sim Plank Mask (Monumental)
A towering Dogon Sim mask (mid 20th C., 150 cm) from Mali — a classic box-like Dogon facial plane with deep rectangular eye hollows, surmounted by a staggering vertical plank-like superstructure intersected by several horizontal crossbars. Decorated with alternating red, white, and black geometric patterns, showing significant fading and desiccation.
1. The Monumental Architecture of the Sim
The Sim mask is an architectural marvel of West African masquerade — requiring incredible physical strength and balance to perform.
- Geometric Verticality over Realism: Representing a mythical antelope or bush spirit, the artist has abandoned zoomorphic realism entirely in favor of staggering geometric verticality.
- Cosmic Link Earth-to-Sky: The towering superstructure (similar to the Sirige but distinct in its crossbar morphology) reaches toward the heavens — creating an unbroken visual and spiritual link between the terrestrial world and the celestial domain of the creator god Amma.
2. The Dama Festival and the Cosmic Antenna
Masks of this colossal 150 cm scale are the awe-inspiring centerpieces of the Dama — the elaborate Dogon funerary festival.
- Purifying the Village: The Dama is required to purify the village and drive the souls of the dead out of the human realm.
- Earth-to-Sky Sweeping Motion: The dancer performs highly athletic sweeping movements — dipping the massive 1.5-meter superstructure down to touch the earth and then violently snapping it back up to the sky; this physical action sweeps up the lingering dangerous essence of death (nyama) and casts it out into the cosmos.
3. Pigment Degradation and Structural Stress
The physical condition provides an unforgeable record of its ceremonial history.
- Natural pigments (red ochre, white kaolin, black soot) painting the geometric triangles have deeply faded and oxidized, sinking into the dry grain of the wood.



