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Single-faced Crest mask
Single-faced Crest mask

Single-faced Crest mask

Label TextIntense naturalism is taken to an extreme among the Ejagham. Originally, the masks may have represented heads of enemies killed in warfare. In the last century, they have been carved from wood and covered with carefully softened antelope skin. Shining pupils, pegged hair and a full set of teeth would add indelible special effects. Owned by groups of warriors and hunters, the mask would survey an audience with intimidating oversight.
Object number81.17.508
Provenance[Anthony Plowright, London, England]; sold to Katherine White (1929-1980), Seattle, Washington, 1972; bequeathed to Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, 1981
Exhibition HistoryLos Angeles, California, Frederick S. Wight Art Gallery, University of California, African Art in Motion: Icon and Act, Jan. 20 - Mar. 17, 1974 (Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art, May 5 - Sept. 22, 1974). Text by Robert Farris Thompson. No cat. no., p. 177, reproduced pl. 214 (as headdress).
Credit LineGift of Katherine White and the Boeing Company
Dimensions13 9/16 x 7 1/4 x 7 1/2 in. (34.5 x 18.4 x 19 cm)
MediumWood, skin, pigment, reed, bone
Three-faced helmet mask
Ejagham
late 19th century
Object number: 81.17.506
Photo: Paul Macapia
Nigerian/Cameroonian
Object number: 81.17.507
Cameroonian
early 20th century
Object number: 2010.45.2
Mask (Mbuto)
before 1932
Object number: 81.17.785
Four-faced helmet mask
Object number: 81.17.518
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
20th century
Object number: 2009.55.3
Woven mask
Melanesian
Object number: 59.95
Photo: Paul Macapia
Ejagham
1973
Object number: 81.17.1977
Object number: 2001.42
Object number: 2001.43
Photo: Scott Leen
Object number: 2005.64