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IGBO / AFIKPO Sagittal-Blade Mask
A highly complex Igbo / Afikpo mask (1st half 20th C., 38 cm) from Nigeria — a narrow projecting face with sharp features and horizontal slit eyes, dominated by a massive towering backward-sweeping sagittal crest or blade. Painted with highly contrasting geometric bands of red, black, and white, retaining authentic fiber attachments along the peripheral rim.
1. Afikpo Geometric Dynamism and the Yam Blade
The Afikpo subgroup of the Igbo is famous for masks that shatter naturalistic proportions in favor of extreme kinetic architecture.
- Face Overwhelmed by Blade: The artist has reduced the human face to a small sharp triangular wedge, completely overwhelmed by the colossal towering scimitar-like blade projecting from the forehead.
- Machete Reference: This sharp sweeping volume is designed to slice through the air during rapid dances — representing the heavy machetes used by successful men to harvest yams, the ultimate symbol of wealth and agricultural prowess.
2. Okumkpa Plays and Satirical Theater
Masks of this complex soaring design are heavily utilized during the Okumkpa plays — spectacular theatrical events orchestrated by the Afikpo men's secret societies during the dry season.
- Public Social Judgment: The masquerade is highly satirical and socially critical.
- Mocking Corrupt Elders: Dancers perform intricate athletic routines and sing songs mocking corrupt elders, lazy farmers, and individuals who have broken taboos — the overwhelming physical presence of the mask visually asserts the society's power to publicly judge and correct behavior.
3. Faded Polychrome and Fibrous Integrity
The surface condition perfectly authenticates early 20th-century origins.
- Naturally Bonded Pigments: White kaolin, red camwood, and black soot have heavily faded, oxidized, and bonded deeply with the dry powdery wood grain — a natural aging process that cannot be simulated with modern acrylics.