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Female Dance Headdress (D'mba/Yamban)

UnknownEarly 20th century

Cincinnati Art Museum

Cincinnati Art Museum
Cincinnati, United States

"This impressive carving represents a ritual mask of the Baga, one of three main tribes that inhabit the Atlantic coast of southwestern Guinea. Worn by members of the dominant Simo secret society, it depicts the spirit Nimba, goddess of increase and fecundity.

An embodiment of the goddess and of “mother earth,” the Nimba mask was associated both with human procreation and the fertility of the fields. According to nineteenth-century accounts written by travelers in the region, the mask was carried about in the marshes and tall grasses of the Baga rice paddies. A potent fertility symbol, the goddess Nimba was also invoked by infertile women in the Simo society. The headdress, in fact, represents an idealized female figure; the long, flat, pendulous breasts identify her as a mature woman who has given birth to many children and has nurtured them to adulthood.

The Nimba mask was the most monumental of ritual African masks, towering eight feet above the ground when worn over a Baga dancer's shoulders."

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  • Title: Female Dance Headdress (D'mba/Yamban)
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: Early 20th century
  • Location: Guinea (Baga people)
  • Location Created: Guinea
  • Physical Dimensions: 45 in. (114.3 cm)
  • Credit Line: Gift of Charles and Harriet Edwards and Museum Purchase with funds from the Lawrence Archer Wachs Fund
  • Alternate Title: Shoulder Mask (Nimba)
  • Accession Number: 1998.43
  • Type: Wood/Sculpture
  • Medium: wood, originally with raffia attachment
Cincinnati Art Museum

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