Songye Male Kifwebe Mask, Congo #320
SKU: 28187747812

Songye Male Kifwebe Mask, Congo #320

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Songye Male Kifwebe Mask, Congo #320Songye Male Kifwebe Mask, Congo #320 In black and white, almost Modernist. Measurements: Height 50 cm. Width 27 cm. With a depth of 26 cm. Mid 20th Century Condition: Very Good with one Tribal Repair on the inside of the Mask. Fine Patina of Ritual Use inside the Mask. Provenance: Part of an old Belgian collection that had been in storage for a long time. The original collector was a colonial coffee planter who had a large plantation in Congo. KIFWEBE

  • Songye Male Kifwebe Mask, Congo #320
  • In black and white, almost Modernist.
  • Measurements: Height 50 cm. Width 27 cm. With a depth of 26 cm.
  • Mid 20th Century
  • Condition: Very Good with one Tribal Repair on the inside of the Mask. Fine Patina of Ritual Use inside the Mask.
  • Provenance: Part of an old Belgian collection that had been in storage for a long time. The original collector was a colonial coffee planter who had a large plantation in Congo. 
  • KIFWEBE MASKS
    According to the specialists, Anthropologists and Art Historians, Kifwebe masks (sing.) or Bifwebe (plur.) are
    differentiated; by gender and by their shape and size but also by the basic surface coloration and the decorative
    design and patterns on the surface. The masks said to represent a female are rarer than masks supposed to
    depict a male. In the field I have never seen more than one female mask at a time, yet groups of male masks are
    commonly encountered. Normally a band of mask-wearers is made up of one female mask and a number of male
    masks. All of the wearers, of course, are male. Most Songye female masks have a grooved surface that is
    painted over with white kaolin (pembe or ntoshi), and when the mask is worn repeatedly, this white partially
    wears off, exposing the natural wood. This exposure heightens the white/brown contrast and reveals the
    engraved striations. But when a mask is stored in a smoky environment the white surface darkens considerably.
    A black (tar, or composite resinous material) vertical stripe running from the top of the head, over the nose, and
    widening at the chin, divides the face in two. The eyes are lidded in black, and dark-red resin or red natural
    pigment (nkula) (sometimes European paint nowadays) will usually highlight the mouth and sometimes the eyes.
    When the surface paint has worn of or is soiled the masks are repainted.

    Female masks will have no sagittal crest or perhaps a slightly raised flat one. Female masks exude beauty,
    tranquility and inner peace. They are not aggressive, either in their appearance or in their behavior.

    Male masks, on the other hand, are aggressive in their general appearance as well as in their comportment
    during their performances and village visits.

    There are at least two kinds of masks said to represent males, it is believed they represent the senior and the
    junior. The senior is usually larger in size, with a big sagittal crest which can be a separate formal entity, or a
    continuation of the forehead protruding above the forehead. The crest and the conical protrusion are supposed
    to contain the magical strength of the mask, hence the bigger the crest the more powerful the mask.

    It is said that male masks (or their wearers) are involved in witchcraft, sorcery, spell-casting and dispersion of
    diseases and epidemics. The junior mask is smaller in size and will have a smaller crest but has the same
    contrasting coloration as the senior mask, mainly black, white, and dark red. 

    Kifwebe are made out of wood and come in many shapes and sizes, depending on the area where they were
    made or their function. Basically, the masks made to be worn come in male, female, or youngster versions, the
    females usually are white and have no crest, the males are polychrome and will have a crest. When masks are
    worn they are part of a complete costume consisting of a hood attached to the mask, a shirt and pants made
    from woven bark. The soles of his shoes will be elephant skin and a striped fur belt completes the costume. The
    top of the mask will have attached to the hood a plummet and a fibre beard will circle the masks face. The
    mask-wearer will carry in his hands items allowing to further identify the portrayed character such as a staff,
    knife, stick or twigs. Other masks are made to be hung in meeting houses; these are sometimes affixed to a
    plaque. The main function of worn masks is to control social order. Other masks serve to protect and identify a
    person or place with the Kifwebe association. Another type of masks, made in a variety of materials such as
    leaves, feathers, woven fibers or bark, are used in an initiatic context. The icon of the masking association
    (kifwebe) will also appear in miniatures worn as charms, as well as on knives or shields.

    THE MANY MEANINGS OF KIFWEBE MASKS
    When one asks Songye men what a Kifwebe mask represents, the answers will vary greatly, but the gist will be
    that the mask basically depicts supernatural beings, such as ancestor spirits (katotoshi) visiting their
    descendants: a beautiful fertile woman on one hand and a strong virile man on the other hand. Many, however,
    will describe a spirit/creature incorporating a variety of animals, or a composite being consisting of mixed human
    and animal elements. According to the literature, all the masks we have discussed, are said to represent either a
    male, when they have a big sagittal crest; or a female, when they have no crest or a very small flattened one ).
    Masks that are smaller in size (but not miniatures) or have a small sagittal crest are said to represent a junior. (I
    have seen masks described as being the "youngster" only among the eastern Songye; in the center there was
    only the male/female differentiation to be noticed, whereas in the west even genderization becomes hazardous)

    Female masks are predominantly white with a few touches of black (eyelids, nose, sagital line, chin) and red
    mouth, eyes), whereas in male masks the dominant color is red, with black and white highlights. According to
    some of my initiated Songye friends, white is perceived as a peaceful color associated with purity and the spirits,
    red is considered a more active color often associated with blood and vital power, and black is linked with
    secrecy and witchcraft.

    Even though some scholars maintain that kifwebe masks were only invented at the beginning of the 20th
    century, this assertion is most probably wrong since these masks had already been noticed and collected in the
    last quarter of the 19th century by early travellers. Furthermore, it is impossible to believe that such a powerful
    "gestalt" as the kifwebe mask could have developed so fast and become so wide spread in such a short time
    span. On the contrary, I am convinced that kifwebe in its various forms and guises is a very old idea, and that
    even though there have been changes and transformations to its shape in the last 100 years, one finds
    throughout the basic idea of a striated, exophtalmic, anthropo-zoomorphic face with a jutting mouth. Today,
    masks are still found dancing in Songyeland, especially in the eastern part. They can be used in altered forms
    or context (secular) and therefore no longer inspire the fear and awe they once did. Obviously, in the past,
    masks played a crucial role in Songye society as they bound men together in strong and powerful brotherhoods
    or associations, the role of which was to initiate, to control social order and to serve as a counterforce to the
    chieftains and noble castes.

    Animals are also represented, albeit in a symbolic way, in the "classical" Kifwebe masks, according to many
    informants. Stripes are associated with a variety of capridae (antelope etc.), zebra and okapi. Other animal
    representations cited include the crocodile (chin), chameleon (eyes), monkey (eyes), ape (sagittal crest),
    rooster (crest), owl (feathered horn), buffalo (some large curved stripes on cheeks), anteater or aardvark
    (mouth), pangolin (tiered surface). The small crest of the "youth" mask, I was told, depicts the sagittal crest
    found on the skull of male apes, whereas the big crest represents the one found on the head of roosters and
    other crested birds. But some informants told me that the concentric circles and striations on the face of the
    mask in fact refer to the actual faces of people who in the past had their faces scarified with concentric circles;
    why not?

    Some authors have tried to decode Kifwebe masks much further, assigning one or more symbolic meanings to
    each of its parts. Since I have not confirmed this information in the field, I will not repeat it or offer my own
    speculation, since symbolism is not my forte. It is possible that over the years the esoteric meaning and iconic
    content of Kifwebe masks have become more complex or changed so as to adapt to new ideas (due to colonial
    interference a lot of esoteric knowledge was lost). At first the masks probably depicted only forest animals or
    their spirits. But when the Songye left their forest habitat and lifestyle to live in the savanna, they settled down
    and created semipermanent villages, with specific burial places. At this point an ancestor cult was probably
    introduced. In order to honor important forebears and invoke their help in solving the problems of the living, the
    imagery of male and female human spirits was then incorporated into the mask's iconography. Or else the idea
    of representing humans in their masks was borrowed from neighbors who used the human icon in their typology.

    FUNCTION OF KIFWEBE MASKS
    Among the Songye, Kifwebe masks are used for a variety of occasions. I have seen groups of mask-wearers
    going from compound to compound to collect donations for their association, and once I witnessed a group of
    masks performing at dusk to honor a deceased member of the Kifwebe association. I also had a furtive glimpse,
    before being chased away, of a female mask and a few male masks gathered in a house of an abandoned
    compound. On another occasion a masked dance was staged to welcome me (and my gifts) to the village.
    Except for these instances I have no firsthand observations of the masks in use, but I have seen, and collected,
    many masks at rest in the field. I asked many questions, but these were answered with reluctance and not very
    precisely. The answers varied greatly depending on whether I asked "average" villagers or men I suspected to
    be members of the Kifwebe association. Yet we can conclude that masks are used in many circumstances, and I
    will list here the various contexts in which the Songye could use their Kifwebe masks. (These same
    circumstances apply to similar masks in neighboring areas of the southern savanna, including the Luba
    Batembo, Luba Hemba, Luba Shanka-di or Luba Katanga and Luba Upemba, Zela, Kunda, Kaonde, Kanyok,
    Kalundwe, Bwile, Tabwa, Lunda.) We shall meet these neighbors' interpretations of their masks in a later section.

    - During initiation procedures worn by the leader of the initiation, by initiators, (by initiates, by initiated?), by
    circumcisers, by the guardians of the circumcision camp.
    - To celebrate seasonal events such as new moon, seeding of crops, first harvesting, first rain.
    - To enforce social control policing, levying of taxes and fines, rendering of justice, execution.
    - To educate and instruct mask-wearers in stage plays depicting the social do's and don'ts.
    - To act as a mnemonic and moralistic device when maskers re-enact mythical or historical events from the past,
    or stage moralistic folktales based on animal and human characters.
    - To honor the deceased at funerary ceremonies, maskers accompany and honor important members of society
    either at funerals or funeral commemorations.
    - To sanctify nominations of titleholders, ritual specialist and enthronement of chiefs.
    - To supervise communal duties such as ditch-cleaning, fortification, road and bridge building.
    - During gathering of associations worn during meeting of members of brotherhoods, associations and societies.
    - To solve crisis or conflict worn by a medium between the living and higher powers or spirits, to gain assistance
    in solving temporary crises such as war, strife, enmity, calamities and epidemics.
    - During hunting worn before or after the hunt, to conduct or super¬vise a communal hunt.
    - During warfare to encourage and bless warriors, worn to bring good luck to a war campaign or lead warriors,
    used in emblem form carved on shields.
    - Purification to cleanse polluted people or areas.
    - Healing to assist in the mental or physical healing process.
    - Entertainment to entertain the community on the occasion of a public festival or festive occasion.
    - Honoring to honor visitors or specific members of the community.
    - Witchcraft some maskers are said to be sorcerers and masks to contain magical powers.
    - To dispense fertility and wealth Female masks are said to enhance fertility of humans, animals, and the earth;
    male masks would bring power and wealth.

    Source: "Beauty and the Beasts - Kifwebe and animal masks of the Songye, Luba and related peoples."
    MARC LEO FELIX

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