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“Byeri” Figure

Unknown1800/1901

Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid

Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid
Madrid, Spain

This sculpture, called a “byeri,” belonged to a cult devoted to ancestral worship in the Fang culture. These seated figures have elongated bodies and prominent belly buttons, with a long rod at their back, and they are used to protect the deceased's remains from evil forces. The Fang believe that ancestral power is preserved in their ancestors' remains, and so they are kept in tree-bark boxes as reliquary containers, to protect them from the glances of women and those who have not been initiated. The sculptor of a “byeri” performed a special ritual, which involved sexual abstinence. Once finished, the figures were blackened and covered with palm oil, and held a place of honor in the family home. In addition to their role as “guardians of the relics”, people consulted the “byeri” about the most important life events in the community and they were regularly used in collective rituals where they were adorned with feather plumes, bronze anklets, and multicolored beaded necklaces. Traces of ritual oils can be seen on this figure.

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  • Title: “Byeri” Figure
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: 1800/1901
  • Physical Dimensions: w12 x h44 x d10 cm
  • Provenance: In 1901, doctor and explorer Amado Ossorio y Zabala (1851-1917) took part in the Spanish-French commission for the exploration of the lands around the borders established by both countries in 1900 in Río Muni (continental region of Equatorial Guinea). On this occasion, Amado Ossorio collected several ethnographic objects that represented the country's cultural diversity. In 1915, Amado Ossorio donated his collection to what was then the Museo Nacional de Antropología, Etnografía y Prehistoria, and is now the Museo Nacional de Antropología.
  • Type: Sculpture / Ritual Objects
  • External Link: CERES
  • Photographer: Pablo Linés Viñuales, 2010
  • Materials: Wood, oil
  • Cultural Context: Ntumu, Fang, Equatorial Guinea
Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid

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