website content

Pendant

Part of the collection: Collection of Dogonian art

Popularization note

The pendant was obtained during the Students' Ethnographic Expedition ‘Africa 76-77', supervised by the National Museum in Szczecin. The Dogon believed it to be a Tellem product or in imitation of Tellem ornaments made by a Dogon smith. The Tellem were an indigenous people inhabiting the Bandiagara Escarpment in the 11th-15th centuries, before the arrival of the Dogon. In the 1960s, Rogier M.A. Bedauxa, a Dutch archaeologist, explored the caves above the Dogon villages and confirmed the existence of the Tellem culture, in which blacksmithing and foundry-making were known. The pendant in question was cast in bronze using the lost wax method. In many West African cultures, a blacksmith's assistant takes care of making the mould. Only skilful manufacturers can cover the moulds with delicate patterns in the form of thin threads, braids, spirals, balls, stylised human faces or zoomorphic figures.

Katarzyna Findlik-Gawron

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown
Dogonowie

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 3,8 cm, width: 4,1 cm

Object type

body adornment

Creation time / dating

między 1951 — 2000

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Mopti, region (Republika Mali); znalezienie: Republika Mali; region: Mopti; okręg: Bandiagara; wioska: Youga-Na

Identification number

MNS/AF/1824

Location / status

object is not displayed now

You might also like:

Add note

Edit note

0/500

Jakiś filtr
Data od:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
Data do:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
asd