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SAM'S collection

Mask (Ngady Mwaash)

Dateearly 20th century
Label TextGeometric order covers this female face. She also provided intellectual order in her role as oral historian and dance instructor. During events convened by royal patrons, viewers would admire her careful choreography and serenity. Parallel lines beneath her eyes are said to represent tears. Kuba history credits a Queen Ngokady with inventing this mask for men to wear, emblematic of the difficulties faced by a mythic woman who had an incestuous relationship with her royal brother.
Object number2001.45
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Disguise: Masks and Global African Art, June 18 - Sept. 7, 2015 (Los Angeles, California, Fowler Museum at UCLA, Oct. 18, 2015 - Mar. 13, 2016; Brooklyn, New York, Brooklyn Museum, Apr. 29 - Sept. 18, 2016).
Credit LineGift of the Christensen Fund
Dimensions15 x 8 x 10in. (38.1 x 20.3 x 25.4cm)
MediumRaffia, wood, fabric, cowrie shells, beads, polychrome, pearls
Mask: Acali
Ibo
Object number: 2005.55
Congolese
early 20th century
Object number: 2001.44
Mask ("Bonu Ameun")
Baule
Object number: 81.17.231
Kuba
Object number: 2001.47
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mangbetu culture
Object number: 81.17.887
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ngala culture
20th century
Object number: 2023.18.10
Kuba
Object number: 2001.42
Kuba
Object number: 2001.43
Laura Gardin Fraser
1930
Object number: 2003.13
Paul Manship
1930
Object number: 2003.14
Frederick MacMonnies
1931
Object number: 2003.16