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Authentic Art and Ethnographic Objects From Africa / Custom Mounting Services
Herbert Cole argues that such figures as this, often called dolls, should rightly be called “child images,” as they are not intended for child’s play. Like the Fon and Yoruba to their West, the Ewe people of Togo and Ghana have a cult of twins. The birth of twins in these communities is traditionally seen as both a blessing and a responsibility. Twin births are believed to be the result of spiritual influence. It is proscribed that each child must be dressed the same and fed together so as not to arouse their capricious nature. And because twins were prone to a higher rate of mortality than other births and understood to be psychically forever linked to their surviving twin, special attention was required in the case of the death of one, or both. Such an event required Ewe mothers to acquire a doll in the marketplace (or to have one carved in the home) and to have it consecrated by spiritualist to act as the home of the deceased spirit. Thereafter it would be the duty of the deceased mother or sister or aunt to look after the carved figurine or venavi (literally twin.) The caring of venavis required ritual feeding and washing but varied in terms of the particulars between communities and individuals. This carving imparts beauty to the eye and to the touch. It has a rounded much-handled and washed patina. The boy’s coiffure and dress and the high quality of the carving suggest he was fashioned in the 1930s or ’40s for a family of means. Ex Ibrahim Kao.
9.5″