Helmet Mask (Lipiko)

Description

Incarnating ancestral spirits, Makonde helmet masks appear in dances that celebrate the conclusion of initiation rituals for adolescent boys and girls. In this darkbrown male example, real human hair has been applied to the skull in irregular patterns that imitate a once-fashionable hairstyle. Its other lifelike characteristics include angular scarification marks and chipped teeth. The artist’s proper name— Diteka—is inscribed in Swahili on the mask’s cheek.

Provenance

Arman (Armand Pierre Fernandez, 1928-2005), Paris and New York, by 1984 [William Rubin (ed.), 1984, p. 39]; by descent to Corice Canton Arman, New York, from 2005 [Peter Stepan, 2005, No. 122, p. 180]; sold to Jacques Germain, Montreal, 2016 [personal correspondence with J. Germain; J. Germain, 2017, pp. 136-137]; sold to the Art Institute, 2017.

Helmet Mask (Lipiko)

Makonde

Early to mid-20th century

Accession Number

239462

Medium

Wood, pigment, and human hair

Dimensions

H.: 26 cm (10 1/4 in.)

Classification

masks

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Through prior bequest of Florene May Schoenborn