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African & Tribal Art :
Nok, Katsina, Sokoto : Nok (Katsina) Terracotta Sculpture of a Man with Ape-like Features
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Nok (Katsina) Terracotta Sculpture of a Man with Ape-like Features - LSO.572
Origin: Nigeria
Circa: 200
BC
to 200
AD
Dimensions:
19.75" (50.2cm) high
Collection: African Art
Style: Katsina
Medium: Terracotta
Location: Great Britain
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| Description |
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Comparatively little is known of the Nok culture,
which is defined largely on the basis of its
superb terracotta artworks. Flourishing between
900 BC and 200 AD, the Nok style is in fact an
agglomeration of similar traditions that
flourished in western and central Nigeria. While
there are different stylistic categories, these have
little social significance as finds of in-situ Nok
material culture are almost unheard-of. Stray
archaeological discoveries have confirmed that
the Nok culture is in fact a myth – the Nok is a
tradition, a style of manufacture that was
adopted by different Iron-Age agriculturally-
based communities that in fact had widely
varying cultures in all other respects. What does
unite the trends, however, is a series of
outstanding ceramic sculptures, which constitute
the most sophisticated and formalised early
African artistic tradition outside Egypt. It should
be noted that the sophistication of these
terracottas makes some scholars believe that
they sprang from a hitherto undiscovered
ceramic tradition. Technically, they are very
unusual because of the manner in which coiled
and subtractive sculpting methods were used to
capture likenesses. Aesthetically, they are both
naturalistic and expressionist, with highly
distinctive elongated forms, triangular eyes,
pierced pupils/nostrils and elaborate hairstyles.
Substyles of the Nok tradition include the
Classical Jemaa Style, the Katsina Ala Style
(elongated heads) and the Sokoto Style
(elongated monobrow foreheads, lending a
severe expression to the face) and random
variants such as the Herm Statues of Kuchamfa
(simplified cylindrical figures topped with normal
heads) and the “standard” three-dimensional
standing figures, which subscribe to the Jemaa
style. The function of the art is unclear, although
the care with which they are executed has led
some to claim they represent nobility, perhaps
ancestors to which obeisance and sacrifices were
offered. That said, our knowledge of the range of
artworks in the Nok repertoire increases with
almost every piece recovered, as in the current
case.
Attribution is problematic, as this style of
manufacture is not conventional for any of the
Nok subgroups. The absence of exotic hairstyles
means it is unlikely to be Katsina. The face is not
fully human and is, additionally, expressionistic
rather than naturalistic. The face is not
elongated, the piece is unusually large, and the
eyes are slits rather than pierced triangles
(Jemaa) or pierced semicircles under a ridged
shelf protruding over both eyes (Sokoto). In
balance, the piece displays the most traits that
are aligned with the Katsina group, including
nugatory limbs, slit eyes (though a non-
conventional form) and simple hair/headwear,
although it must be said that the attribution of
the piece is hampered by its uniqueness. This
places the piece at the end of the 1st millennium
BC and the first centuries of the 1st millennium
AD. As stated, the body is schematic rather than
fully detailed, and it may have once been dressed
or otherwise adorned. While the limbs are
broken, one would suspect that it was sitting
with crossed legs and hands resting on the
abdomen, as the breaks are consistent with this
interpretation and there are in any case other
Katsina pieces that share such characters. The
nipples are asymmetrical, and so placed as to
make a face on the chest, with the necklace (see
below) as a nose and the navel (or perhaps stub
where the hands once attached) as a mouth. The
figure is evidently male. The neck is very long
and columnar, as is the rest of the body, and
decorated with a simple woven-style necklace
with a central diadem. Up to this point the figure
resembles other Katsina statues. However, it is
the head, surmounted by a plain skullcap/
hairstyle, that is most highly distinctive. Most
Katsina faces are refined, tranquil and smooth (if
female) or bad-tempered and bearded (if male).
In this case, however, the whole face has been
pulled out into a snout-like protuberance with a
wide slit mouth, slit eyes and a broad, rounded
nose with a narrow apex. There is a beard, but
rather than being spatulate and delineated as in
other Nok pieces, it is smooth and blade-like,
and protrudes from beneath the chin in a parallel
axis with the body, and overshadowed by the
protruding lips. The ears, which are usually small
and rounded, are flared and cupped like those of
a chimpanzee (or monkey), which the face
resembles in so many ways. It is evidently also
meant to be a man, however, as his body is
generally anthropomorphic, and he is wearing
jewellery (and possibly a hat). It is interesting to
note that other Nok figures are depicted
wrestling with animals, perhaps as a means of
capturing their character, or as a demonstration
of their strength and social prowess. Perhaps the
ape was significant to these groups in some way;
as the act of creating such works was doubtless
reserved for the socially elevated, it is possible
that the attribution of ape characteristics was
flattering. Alternatively, it may represent some
forest or wild spirit, or deity.
This is a striking and extremely rare masterwork.
As one of the most famous artistic foundations
in African art history, Nok terracottas are
something that no serious collection can afford
to be without.
- (LSO.572)
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