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Gelede Mask: Female with Headtie

Photo: Paul Macapia

Gelede Mask: Female with Headtie

early 20th century

Precisely incised triangles adorn the face on this Gelede mask with balanced, carefully outlined features. A broad head tie sweeps around her hair, revealing tight linear rows of braids. No details are out of place, suggesting that this is a woman of balanced character. Iwa, or "ideal character," is cultivated by the Gelede festival and encouraged as the source of beauty and joy in life. Positive, ethical behavior makes one attractive not only to Iya Nla, the Great Mother, but also to Olu Iwa (Lord of Character and Existence), and finally to all those who live in the community.

The word Gelede describes a spectacle that relaxes and pacifies the beholder. Gelede is primarily dedicated to the maternal principal in nature personified as Iya Nla, the Great Mother; it is also aimed at promoting peace and social harmony within a particular community.

The first part takes place at night, the Efe ceremony. During the ceremony, a mask called Efe-which means the humorist or joker-performs throughout the night, praying to the Great Mother to be very generous to the society. At the same time, the mask criticizes anti-social elements in the society. The emphasis of the Efe mask is on satire, on poetry
At dawn, the Efe will withdraw, and then the crowd will gradually disperse. In the afternoon of the second day, small children come out to perform their own Gelede. By five o'clock, the marketplace is filled up once more, and then other Gelede masks arrive from different sections of town. Daylight masks do not sing-whatever they want to say is in the headdresses.

Another mask carries the image of a female, apparently a princess of a Yoruba orisha. The face is textured to suggest a net or veil, often used to cover the faces of people of spirituality. As a result of the transatlantic slave trade between the sixteenth and late nineteenth centuries, hundreds of thousands of Yoruba were transplanted to the New World. Many of them took Gelede with them, and Gelede performance continued into the early twentieth century. Around 1988, a society known as the Society of Yemaya was formed in New York. In Gelede, nature becomes the nurturing element of culture with the Great Mother. Yemaya is personified as the Great Mother who could provide for people during slavery, and continued to do so in Cuba and Brazil. Gelede ceremony also influenced the carnivals of the Caribbean, and Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Yorubas were present in large numbers in New Orleans. There is a Yoruba village in Sheldon, South Carolina where there is a shrine dedicated to Yemaya, there are paintings and sculptures illustrating Gelede and Yemaya-so the Gelede tradition has been transformed in various ways in the Americas.

Gelede headdresses were collected as far back as the 1880s, if not earlier. Some European missionaries asked their converts to surrender their masks. There are representations of Gelede masks in the works of European artists dating back to the nineteenth century. But most of the collectors did not bother about the names of the artists, they simply yanked off the headdress because that was regarded as most important. Retired headdresses were often given to children to practice with, but these days, they may be sold to dealers.



Wood, pigment, and leather
13 3/4 x 8 5/8 x 7 1/8 in. (35 x 21.9 x 18.1 cm)
Gift of Katherine White and the Boeing Company
81.17.589
Provenance: [Ed Primus, Los Angeles, California]; sold to Katherine White (1929-1980), Seattle, Washington, 1975; bequeathed to Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, 1981
Photo: Paul Macapia
location
Not currently on view

Resources

Exhibition HistoryBellingham, Washington, Whatcom Museum of History and Art, Masks: Facing the World, July 30 - Nov. 8, 1987.

Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Art from Africa: Long Steps Never Broke a Back, Feb. 7 - May 19, 2002 (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Oct. 2, 2004 - Jan. 2, 2005; Hartford, Connecticut, Wadsworth Atheneum, Feb. 12 - June 19, 2005; Cincinnati, Ohio, Cincinnati Art Museum, Oct. 8, 2005 - Jan. 1, 2006; Nashville, Tennessee, Frist Center for the Visual Arts, Jan. 27 - Apr. 30, 2006 [as African Art, African Voices: Long Steps Never Broke a Back]). Text by Pamela McClusky. No cat. no., pp. 227, 236, reproduced pl. 93.
Published ReferencesFagg, William and John Pemberton III, Yoruba Sculpture of West Africa, New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1982. pp. 116, 150

Ottenberg, Simon, Igbo and Yoruba Art Contrasted, in African Arts, Vol. 16, No. 2 (Feb., 1983), pp. 48-55, 97-98, image 1 p. 49

Cameron, Elisabeth L., Men Portraying Women: Representations in African Masks, in African Arts, Vol. 31, No. 2 (Special Issue: Women's Masquerades in Africa and the Diaspora), Spring 1998, pp. 72, 79, illus. p. 79

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