Mask
Item number 3420/24 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number 3420/24 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Wood rectangular face mask (part a) with tall ladder-like superstructure. The face mask has two sunken rectangular areas on either side of the nose, and two cutout square eye holes below a rounded brow ridge. Attached to the back of the mask is brown plant fibre hair. Extending from the top of the head, between the blue ears, is a tall superstructure of openwork panels alternating between various hourglass shapes, and lines, tapering in at the end. The superstructure is two sections, split between the fifth and sixth panel (part b). The two sections are tied together with small strips of leather.
In the past, these masks could reach 18 ft high, and were kept in special caves. The sirige mask (meaning 'storied house'̂) is performed in the Sigi ceremony, held every 60 years to honor the ancestors and renew life force, and during the funeral ceremony of a deceased male community member that took part in a Sigi ceremony. Now, like most Dogon masks, they are also used in civic ceremonies and to greet tourists.
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Wood rectangular face mask (part a) with tall ladder-like superstructure. The face mask has two sunken rectangular areas on either side of the nose, and two cutout square eye holes below a rounded brow ridge. Attached to the back of the mask is brown plant fibre hair. Extending from the top of the head, between the blue ears, is a tall superstructure of openwork panels alternating between various hourglass shapes, and lines, tapering in at the end. The superstructure is two sections, split between the fifth and sixth panel (part b). The two sections are tied together with small strips of leather.
In the past, these masks could reach 18 ft high, and were kept in special caves. The sirige mask (meaning 'storied house'̂) is performed in the Sigi ceremony, held every 60 years to honor the ancestors and renew life force, and during the funeral ceremony of a deceased male community member that took part in a Sigi ceremony. Now, like most Dogon masks, they are also used in civic ceremonies and to greet tourists.
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