Ɵ Oshe Shango, Yoruba People, Nigeria Wood... - Lot 52 - Giquello

Lot 52
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Estimation :
25000 - 40000 EUR
Ɵ Oshe Shango, Yoruba People, Nigeria Wood... - Lot 52 - Giquello
Ɵ Oshe Shango, Yoruba People, Nigeria Wood with brown patina H. 45,5 cm Oshe Shango, Yoruba, Nigeria H. 17 7/8 in Provenance: - Samir Borro, Brussels - Bernard de Grunne, Brussels - Private collection The orishas of the Yoruba are divinized human beings who lived at the time of the creation of the world. According to tradition, they were devoted to the natural forces governing the Yoruba world and honouring them allowed them to protect it. Shango, the spirit of thunder and lightning, was one of the most important orishas and his cult spread along the slave trade routes to Brazil and the Caribbean. In Yoruba country, the worship of Shango required the presence of a sceptre or oshe shango with the attributes of the god, a double hammer called edum ara, most often carried by a worshipper. Sculpted by a master of the Igbomina group, our sceptre represents a woman respectfully bowed under the weight of the divine attribute tied into her headdress. Her imposing breast is an obvious symbol of fertility and reminds us that Shango is a fertile god. The balance of this sculpture and the arrangement of its volumes are remarkable. The finishing of the work in its smallest details and the beautiful patina that it is covered with give it a first rank among the oshe shango sceptres of the Igbomina that have come down to us.
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