This imposing buffalo (?) mask was made by the
Bambara/Bamana people of Mali, and was an
attribute of one of their secret societies. It is a
very accomplished piece, with a large, rounded
head running into an elongated snout, and
framed with incurved horns and diagonally-
projecting ears. The surface detailing is
intriguing, with a central roundel on the
forehead narrowing at the apex of the nose then
widening towards the snout (where it is
bifurcated), lending a more three-dimensional
look to the piece. The eyes are small squares
tucked into either side of the constriction. The
mouth is agape. The surface is smoothed and
quite glossy with usage, which is unusual for
these pieces, which are usually matt and
decorated with organic materials (see below).
The Bambara/Bamana is one of the largest
groups in Mali (about 2.5 million) and lives in a
savannah grassland area that contrasts strongly
with the Dogon heartland. Their linguistic
heritage indicates that they are part of the Mande
group, although their origins go back perhaps as
far as 1500 BC in the present-day Sahara (i.e.
Tichitt). They gave rise to the Bozo, who founded
Djenne in an area subsequently overrun by the
Soninke Mande (<1100 AD). Their last empire –
the Mande-speaking Songhai – dissolved in the
1600s, and many Mande speakers spread out
along the Nigeria River Basin. The Bamana
empire arose from these remnant populations in
around 1740. The height of its imperial strength
was reached in the 1780s under the rule of
N’golo Diarra, who expanded their territory
considerably. However, their influence waned in
the 19th century and the empire fell to the
French in 1892.
Their society is Mande-like overall, with
patrilineal descent and a nobility/vassal caste
system that is further divided into numerous
subvariants of the Bamana state, including the
Jula (traders), Fula (cattle herding), Bozo
(essentially endentured slaves, carrying out
menial jobs) and Maraka (rich merchant class).
Unusual jobs are rewarded with caste status,
notably historians (Griot), while those whose
ancestors were originally slaves to the Bamana
(Jongo) have inherited their antecedents’ low
status. Age, sex and occupation groups are
classed by “ton” – societies that reflect their
social importance (age- or sex-related) or work
(i.e. hunters, farmers). This complex history is
echoed in the systematics of indigenous art
traditions. There are four main mask forms,
related to the n’tomo, Komo, Nama and Kore
societies. Other forms include the famous Chi-
Wara headcrest, which was used to encourage
good harvests. Heavily encrusted zoomorphic
“Boli” figures are also known, along with
everyday items include iron staffs, wooden
puppets and equestrian figures, which double as
accessories for male initiation ceremonies. Their
anthropomorphic door locks are especially well-
known, and are given to women as wedding
presents as they imply fertility with a vertical
female body and the “male” bar which slides
back and forth.
Masquerade conventions are extremely complex.
This model pertains to the Komo, one of the
three power societies in Bamana culture (the
others are the Kono and Nama societies) which
was a secret elder society of priests and elders
who were concerned with the guardianship of
tradition, judicial customs and rites of passage.
These zoomorphic masks were usually made in
an elongated manner, then adorned with organic
objects such as feathers, textiles, bones, cordage
and raffia. The masks were worn, usually with an
all-covering costume, on top of the head, and
the displays were intended to captivate and
intimidate onlookers into social obedience. The
society headdress (komo-kun) is worn for a
dance to invoke nyama, the force that activates
the universe.
This is an intriguing piece of African art.