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Instructions
Imagine that you are the Director of Health Information for a
large hospital. As Director, you sit on various institution-wide
committees which govern the organization’s policies. You have
seen issues arise that cause you to propose changes in policies,
procedures and operations across the hospital. Therefore, you
have decided
to create a proposal to the CEO and Board of Directors, which
you will develop in collaboration with committee teams. Please
follow the instructions below in completion of this assignment.
Welcome to the first day of our virtual
zoom classroom
31 March 2020
Ancient Mali: Archaeology and the Inland
Niger Delta Terracottas
Aerial photo of the town of Jenne
during the rainy season
Satellite photo of the
Inland Niger Delta
Sources of Information
for reconstructing the history of this region:
• Arabic and European Accounts: very
limited before the 19th century
• Oral traditions passed down from
generation to generation. These provide
some context and flavor with kernels of
truth woven in. Local oral traditions in
Jenne identified Jenne-jeno as the
ancestral home of its peoples
• Terracotta sculptures that began
appearing on the art market as early as
the 1970s, but little information about
their use or function (without
archaeology)
• Archaeological Investigations:
Excavations by the McIntoshes in 1977
and 1981 at the site of Jenne-jeno and
neighboring site of Hambarketolo
(remember the map quiz?)
INLAND NIGER DELTA
Jenne-jeno
250 BC - 1400 AD
Mali
archaeological site
12-17th century AD
Mali
terracotta sculptures
thermoluminescence
carbon 14
stratigraphy
terracotta
Roderick and
Susan McIntosh
Wagadu
The Inland Niger Delta is the name given to the region in
central Mali where the great Niger river
floods annually, making it an agriculturally rich region in the
midst of the Sahel. Just outside the present-
day city of Jenne lies the archaeological site of Jenne-jeno,
which was a multi-ethnic urban center well
before the arrival of Islam and trade across the Sahara,
inhabited by 250 BC.
Aerial photo of the site of Jenne-jeno
during the rainy season
(doesn’t look like much, right?)
on surface: ceramic pottery fragments and
funerary urns, evidence of house
foundations, and evidence of a city wall
Aerial photo of the present day town of
Jenne with Jenne-jeno in the background
Methods of dating (None of them super accurate, need
corroboration)
1) stratigraphy, essentially a sequence of layers that provide a
relative chronology (see below)
2) radio-carbon dating of organic materials, especially wood
and charcoal based on rate of decay
+/- years
3) thermoluminescence (google it) the minerals in clay store
energy, and when clay is fired, the
firing “cleans” the slate and the process of storing energy
renews, thus possible to approximate
the date an object was fired within a range of (hundreds) of
years.
Phase I: 250 BC-300 CE
circular house of bent poles and reed mats
suggests possible seasonal habitation
with semi-nomadic people (herders and
fishermen?) returning to the site every year.
Example of a temporary nomadic
structure set up on the edge of Timbuktu
that is similar to what the earliest Jenne-
jeno houses may have looked like
Phase II: 300 - 800 CE
included evidence of stacked mud
circular house foundations, indicates
that people lived here year-round
Note: The McIntoshes second excavation in 1981 was funded in
part by National Geographic. They
sent a couple of photographers to see what the McIntoshes were
doing, but the archaeological site
was pretty boring, so they brought this family out from Jenne to
“stage” the early house. The
problem is that lighting these fires in the excavation pit
destroyed the scientific value of this site,
because the fires would compromise any carbon-14 or
thermoluminescence testing.
Phase II: 300 - 800 CE
Massive city wall constructed from sun-dried mud
bricks, had to have been a major public works
project. People probably needed protection from
flooding, not conflict from outside
Phase II
burial urns: Large ceramic
pots in which they buried
their dead
In 2011, I visited the archaeologist Mamadou
Cisse (remember him from Caravans of Gold?)
when he was excavating a site just outside the
town of Jenne on the opposite side from of
Jenne-jeno. They discovered this intact funerary
urn. We were there to see them pull it from
the ground. See video posted on BlackBoard.
Phase III: 800-1000 AD
This time period was the height of
occupation at the site with as many as
20,000 inhabitants, with both round
and rectangular houses, and a
blacksmith workshop active during
this time period.
After 1000, the city declined and was
abandoned completely by 1400, when
the present day town of Jenne began
to be occupied.
Another National Geographic photo: They
decided to pay the herders to run a herd of
cattle up the hill and across the site so that
they would have a more interesting photo!
Phase I 250 BC-300 CE
imported stone beads
pottery sherds
iron and iron slags
earliest domesticated rice
fired clay figurines: possibly toys
Phase II 300 -800 CE
more to lives than just subsistence, evidence
of social stratification and diversity
iron working at the site
copper ornaments (copper from the Sahara)
gold earring (gold from southern gold mines)
fancy footed bowls and decorative pottery
Phase III 800 - 1000 CE
even more variety of goods, possibly as many
as 20,000 inhabitants = URBAN center with
satellite communities (Hambarketolo)
glass bead necklace from North Africa
terra cotta statuettes
Phase I: more than
100,000 pottery sherds
similar to pottery from
the Sahara several
centuries earlier,
suggests that the first
inhabitants came from
the north
The crew stayed in the town of
Jenne (The Great Mosque is in
the background). They went to
excavate early in the morning,
and in the afternoons they
sorted and washed pottery.
The black bit in the middle
is iron slag, the refuse from
smelting iron ore: evidence
of iron working at the site,
not just imported objects,
but no know local sources
of iron ore, so means trade
contacts and specialized
craftsmanship.
Reclining figure excavated in 1981 along with a head
that does not match the body, note amulets, lots of
jewelry and a knife strapped to the arm
Phase IV: 1000-1400 CE
gradual decline in population, abandoned
by 1400 CE
The terracotta statues and fragments the
McIntoshes excavated were all from this
last phase. The “Jenne terracottas”
represent a significant early sculptural
tradition, but here's the problem: More
than a thousand of these terracottas are in
museums and private collections in Europe
and the US, but only a few of them (maybe
10!) came from proper legal excavations.
With the exception of the reclining figure, the pieces found by
the
McIntoshes are not fabulous works of art, but they are important
because
their excavations provide the only information we have about
the use or
function or context of these terracottas. The vast majority of
these
sculptures in museum and private collections were probably
plundered or
looted from archaeological sites by local people hoping to earn
a few bucks
when they sell it to a middleman. They are smuggled out and
sold privately
for a lot more money.
This piece sold in 2019 for
more than $400,000.
It had been in a European
collection since the 1960s,
and thus before there were
laws in place that specifically
protected this tradition.
It is suggested that this piece
may represent Sogolan, the
mother of the so-called Lion
King Sundiata, founder of the
empire of Mali according to
oral traditions.
https://www.sothebys.com/
en/auctions/ecatalogue/2019/
coll-riviere-pf1928/lot.
51.html
Looters know to dig
where one can see
house foundations on
the surface
8 statues/fragments excavated by the McIntoshes
found in four different contexts:
1) figure with head and crossed arms placed in
round structure with several ceramic pots and
a round object with snakes deliberately
collapsed
2) two headless figures (below, male and female)
found eroding out of the surface next to a
house foundation under the floor
3) male / female pair, with figure fragments in a
niche in a house wall occupied by iron workers
associated with sandstone mortars, iron rods,
pots with snakes perhaps a rain making altar
4) reclining headless figure with head found in a
refuse pit
Possible functions:
1) as representations of ancestors that might
have been placed on altars within the home.
Most depict human forms (male and female
pairs, mother and child, etc.) And some seem
to be in positions of prayer. So, maybe this is
a reasonable explanation. But there are others
that represent bizarre diseased figures and
some animal forms, so these ones don’t fit
this explanation.
2) as spiritual offerings, such as the one places
inside a structure that was intentionally
collapsed, or the male and female pair found
embedded in the mud wall of a house. In fact,
there is an oral tradition collected from old
men in Jenne concerning offerings of
statuettes and grain as symbolic re-enactment
of legend of Tampama, a young virgin said to
have been buried alive in the walls of Jenne to
insure that the city walls would stand against
the floods.
3) Other … as you will see in the following
slides, there are other subjects for which
there is no archaeological explanation, just
speculation.
Some male and female
pairs, figures in positions
of prayer or mourning.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Seated Figure
13th century
Jenne peoples
This haunting figure huddles with its leg hugged to its
chest and its head dropped on its knee. It
simultaneously suggests the knotted tension of anxiety
and the sublime absorption of deep prayer. Created
over 700 years ago, in the Inland Niger Delta region of
present-day Mali, this elegant work's intense emotional
immediacy blurs the boundaries of time and place.
This terracotta sculpture comes from a site called
Jenne-jeno, the oldest known city in sub-Saharan Africa.
Jenne-jeno flourished in the ninth century A.D., but
declined and was abandoned by 1400. Items of cast
brass and forged iron, clay vessels, and figures like this
one survive. They testify to what scholars contend was
a richly varied and highly sophisticated urban society.
A few controlled archaeological digs provide only the
vaguest outlines of the original significance of the art
of this time and region. Recovered terracotta figures
are frequently quite detailed. They include jewelry,
clothing, and body ornaments such as the parallel
columns of bumps and circles on the back of this
work. Sometimes they cover the entire body and seem
to represent the pustules of some dreadful illness.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/314362
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Jenne%2
0peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize=
0
Another type of figure are these equestrian warriors,
however none of these have been found archaeologically,
so we don’t know if they were displayed in groups, or
represented individual ancestors. We do know that the
Empire of Mali boasted a large and effective cavalry.
Motherhood theme: Childbirth
and (happy) mother and child,
but then we have an emaciated
pregnant woman (disturbing,
no?) and even more disturbing:
A woman giving birth to a
snake (lovely) with snakes
coming out of her ears (yikes).
Lots of snakes … Possible a
reference to oral traditions
about the Great Snake of
Wagadu (the local Soninke
name for what we call the
Empire of Ghana). The legend is
that the Great Snake provided
the empire with gold in return
for the sacrifice of a beautiful
virgin every year. But one year
the lover of the young woman
selected took a sword and
beheaded the snake, and the
head rolled south and did not
stop until it reached the edge
of the forests (where the gold
is still being mined today).
Ghana entered a seven year
period of drought and famine,
its gold reserves were depleted,
and the empire fell.
I could give you a creative writing
assignment about these two pieces.
What is going on here?
The large female figure has two wiggling
“children” on her lap, but one of them
has a beard, and they seem to be
pinching her ear with a pair of
blacksmith tongs … yikes.
The group below includes what appears
to be a man with a knife sneaking
around a large buffalo/cow with the
intent to attack a man minding his own
business and drinking some tea (?)
Finally, this piece represents
what appears to be a shrine with
two serpents coiled around the
outside and a human arm
reaching up the side of the
doorway. A CT scan revealed
that the human figure was a
headless pregnant woman (!!!)
and that the shrine
contained contained a bunch of
what seems to be other headless
women ... virtual human
sacrifice? female seclusion for
other ritual purposes? The Great
Snake of Wagadu?
https://noma.org/ct-scans-reveal-mysterious-
figures-in-malian-terracotta/
https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/
terracotta-statues/djenne-shrine/
https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/terracotta-statues/djenne-
shrine/
https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/terracotta-statues/djenne-
shrine/
Timbuktu
Mali
Jenne (Djenne)
Mali
Bobo-Dioulasso
Burkina Faso
Kong
Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Kawara
Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Larabanga
Ghana
adobe (banco) mud brick architecture
ARCHITECTURE OF ISLAM
14th century CE to present
Labelle Prussin
Practicing Architect and
Architectural Historian (later
went for a PhD)
Problems at the time (1968)
when she wrote the article:
1) lack of research, or research
too focused on a particular
area, not enough research
across the broad region
2) Lack of permanent
structures to study, mostly
mud-brick architecture, not
much stone (remember that
at Koumbi Saleh, the stone
mosque survived, but the
kings palace did not)
3) Lack of respect for African
architecture generally not
seen as Architecture (with
capitol A) but rather as
building technology
Note: So, the exhibition at the Met is called “Sahel: Art and
Empires of the Shores of the Sahara”. We are now
moving south into the region known as the Sudan. The term
Sudan refers to the region Arabs called the land of
the Blacks (Bilad-al-Sudan). Remember our discussion of the
trans-Saharan trade? Camel caravans made their
way across the desert in search of gold among other things. The
success of that trade depended on the fact that
there was already a thriving trade network across the Sudanic
region, connecting the (Guinean) forest zones
with the Sahel. The Berbers and Arabs brought the Islamic
faith with them, and it spread along trade routes
throughout this region. The traders were among the first to
adopt Islam and trade and Islamic learning went
hand in hand throughout this region. As more people adopted
Islam, there was a need for mosques to
accommodate the faithful. So who do you think built these
mosques?
What do you notice about the distribution of Sudanese mud
mosques in West Africa?
Timbuktu
Jenne
BoboDioulasso
Kong
Kawara
Larabanga
Prussin identifies 5 distinct types of Sudanese-style mosques
that correspond to five phases
of spread of this distinctive architectural style in West Africa
(read the article by Prussin!).
Timbuktu, M
Kawara, Cote d’IvoireKong, Cote d’Ivoire
Jenne, Mali
Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso
Djinguereber Mosque, Timbuktu, Mali
probably built in the 14th century,
possibly following Mansa Musa’s return
to Mali after his pilgrimage to Mecca.
There is a tradition that he brought an
architect with him
https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-
timbuktu-djingareyber-
mosque.html#header5-a9
Check out this website with 3-D modeling
of the mosque (also posted on Blackboard)
Very cool. The only weird part is that the
model has no people and the mosque
seems to be out in the middle of nowhere.
https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber-
mosque.html#header5-a9
https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber-
mosque.html#header5-a9
https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber-
mosque.html#header5-a9
Sankore Mosque, Timbuktu, Mali
Above: photograph taken in the early 20th century.
The caption says the mosque was constructed in
the 11th century, but it was probably constructed
in the 14th century, around the same time as the
Djingereber mosque.
Right: a photograph I took in the middle of the day
when it was well over 100 degrees. The streets
were deserted except this young woman and the
goat. But when we returned to the city at 6 pm,
the streets and shops were packed. Noon was a
great time for pictures, but not for shopping.
Aerial photograph of a town along the Niger river during the
dry season. The dark spot in the center
of the town is the mosque, designed to resemble the Great
Mosque of Jenne, but smaller. The open
space near the mosque is the market place. You find the
mosque, you find the market, you find the
market, you find the mosque. Trade and Islam went hand in
hand.
The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali on market day
Market day in Jenne, Mali
The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali (1980s) on market day
The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali (1980’s) the open place is
deserted except for this horseman
named Chokari. I had just interviewed him and returned back to
where I was staying for lunch
when I saw him riding across the square.
Jenne, Mali
https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-
mali-djenne-great-
mosque.html#header5-an
The Great mosque, Jenne, Mali
Massive pillars and arches on the
interior. Air and light vents on the
roof with ceramic caps.
The main mosque,
Bobo Dioulasso
Burkina Faso
Kong, Cote d’Ivoire
Kong, Cote d’Ivoire
Kawara, Cote d’Ivoire
Larabanga, Ghana
probably dates from the 17th century
(Wikipedia says 1421)
conserved in 2002 with help from the
World Monuments Fund, but hard to
maintain in this climate.
2011
2002
Sorobango, Cote d’Ivoire
Small Sudanese style mosque in a village in
southern Mali. It has been years since it was
re-plastered, because they built a new
mosque next to it out of cement.
An even smaller village mosque that is made of cement, but
still has that unmistakable Sudanese style
Traditional Sudanese-style mud brick
architecture, Jenne, Mali
French colonial architecture
Sudanese style in cement,
Dakar, Senegal
Train Station in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso
Community center built
in 1930 in the town of
Frejus, France (the
French Riviera). It was
built for West African
troops stationed in
France during the
Colonial period, and still
owned by the Ministry of
Defense
Main market building built by the French
in the center of Bamako
View of one of the main banks in
the capitol of Bamako
Mosques built today are usually of cement and follow a style
more familiar from Saudi Arabia
BAMANA
Mali
AD 1300 - present
Ciwara (Chiwara)
nyama=ritual power, the force that
animates all life, embodied in all living
things but also present in inanimate
materials (earth, clay, stone, iron)
nyamakalaw=those who handle nyama,
especially blacksmith-sculptors
boli=ritual object or altar
Stephen Wooten
Nyamakala: The Bamana recognize three groups of artists who
handle and transform nyama:
1) Griots (male and female oral artists, musicians,
traditional historians) speech is considered to have nyama, it is
powerful and potentially dangerous.
2) Leatherworkers, who transform the skins of animals into
leather
3) Blacksmith-sculptors who transform iron ore into iron, and
who
transform wood into beautiful sculptures, and whose wives are
potters, transforming clay into pottery, all by means of fire
Bamana sculpture of an exceptionally
powerful woman with child. Note the
headdress that represents the kind of
protective hat worn by hunters and
warriors, covered with powerful
amulets, medicinal packets stuffed into
horns and the knife strapped to the
upper arm, like the reclining terracottas
figure from Jenne-jeno
Bamana figures on display at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art carved by blacksmiths
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Mother and Child
15th–20th century
Bamana peoples
Bamana notions of ideal beauty and character
are evoked in this figure of a mother and child.
The figure is part of a corpus of large, relatively
naturalistic sculptures whose rounded volumes
and variety of gestures depart from the angular
forms and stiff postures characteristic of many
other types of Bamana sculpture. These figures
are displayed at the annual ceremonies of "Jo", an
association of initiated Bamana men and women,
and at the rituals of "Gwan", a related society
whose purpose is to help women conceive and
bear children. Groups of sculptures which were
collectively owned by individual communities to
be publicly exhibited on such occasions, included
representations of a mother and child, a male
companion, and related attendant figures.
This figure depicts a woman of extraordinary
abilities, as shown by the amulet-laden hat she
wears and the knife strapped to her left arm,
both of which are conventionally associated with
the powers of male hunters. An even more vital
message conveyed by the sculpture is the
importance of motherhood in maintaining social
cohesion and continuity within Bamana society,
and elders' roles in passing on their skills,
powers, and values to future generations.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/
collection/search/312336?
searchField=All&sortBy=Rel
evance&where=Africa%7cM
ali&ft=Gwan&offset=0&
amp;rpp=20&pos=6
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Bamana
%20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSi
ze=0
The term Ciwara (pronounced Chi-wara) refers to:
1) the mythical beast that taught the Bamana to
farm.
2) to the society that celebrates farming (see
Wooten article)
3) and to the antelope sculptures, wooden
headdresses that usually appear in pairs
What does Steven Wooten
say about these images?
Wooten describes a series of events
he witnessed while doing research
on agricultural practices among the
Bamana, including several ciwara
performances
This photograph was taken by a friend of mine who witnessed a
ciwara wonder-working
performance that included this man putting his hand into the
fire, grabbing a burning stick,
without getting burned (do not try this at home!)
There are three distinct styles of Ciwara headdresses:
vertical, composite and horizontal. All include elements of
antelopes, some anteaters, and abstract
elements that are not found in nature. Remember, these
represent a mythical beast.
Pangolin
eland antelope
bull sable antelope Aardvark
vertical style Ciwara
Verticle style ciwara
The male figures
are the most
elaborate with a
lot of creativity in
the abstract
patterns of the
mane
vertical style Ciwara
this vertical style Ciwara sold at
auction in 2012 for $130,000
Photograph taken before 1910 of a Banana ciwara performance
Composite style (often combining antelope with
anteater/aardvark/pangolin) Ciwara
horizontal style ciwara headdresses
This one has the tail of a
chameleon
boli (ritual altar)
mixed media (don’t ask!, okay, see the next slide with a
bolt and the description from the Met Museum)
Most boli are small, can be held in the hand and
danced with, but check this one out.
Met Museum
Power Object (Boli)
19th–first half of 20th century
Bamana peoples
A rough, cracked surface obscures exact identification of the
organic and inorganic
materials assembled to create the boli (pl.: boliw), or power
object, shown here. Such
objects play an essential role within Bamana spiritual life.
Boliw have attracted much
attention from Western observers due to their amorphous forms
and unusual
materials. The bulbous and amorphous shape is rather
idiosyncratic within the
repertoire of Bamana art. Boliw are composed of a wooden
armature "core" wrapped
in white cotton cloth, around which clay and sacrificial
materials are encrusted. This
boli has four short "legs" upon which it sits, as well as a single
hump rising from the
top. The creature that a boli represents is unidentifiable, but
many take on the loose
zoomorphic form suggested by this work, while others may be
anthropomorphic.
The primary function of a boli is to accumulate and control the
naturally occurring life
force called nyama for the spiritual benefit of the community.
The composition of the
encrusted patina varies, but all the ingredients possess this
inherent and important
spiritual energy. The encrustation may include the blood of
chickens or goats, chewed
and expectorated kola nuts, alcoholic beverages, honey, metal,
animal bones, vegetable
matter, and sometimes millet. Sometimes this added matter is so
extensive that it
obscures the original wooden form and takes on a shape all its
own. As the
encrustation cracks and hardens throughout the years, it gives
the impression that
these ingredients are tightly packed within the boli. As the
sacrificial materials
accumulate over time, each added layer affords the structure
greater spiritual power.
Boliw and their numerous ingredients have been interpreted in a
number of different
ways. It has been suggested that the disparate elements of which
boliw are composed
symbolize the various parts of the universe, so that the whole
can be read as a model
of Bamana cosmological belief. Such power objects are owned
by male associations
whose members progress through induction processes that span
decades. Over time,
they attain an esoteric knowledge of the natural and spiritual
world. Opaque and
mysterious to the uninitiated eye, boliw are safely handled only
by those association
members equipped with the most rarified expertise and
knowledge.
https://
www.metmuseum.or
g/art/collection/
search/312389
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Bamana
%20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSi
ze=0
former West African Airline
Hotel in Bamako
Former Malian airline with ciwara logo
West African Research
Association (WARA)
Because of the graphic clarity
and elegance of the Bamana
chiwara sculptural design, the
headdress has inspired
countless commercial logos
African restaurant in Palermo, Sicily, Italy
Ciwara as the name of an award given
by the Malian state
ciwara wax cloth design
Chiwara as the name for a nonprofit organization in Michigan
that provides training and workshops
around issues of sustainability. The website is no longer active
(maybe the organization disbanded) but I
am curious as to where the founder got his idea to use Ciwara as
the inspiration for the organization
and for their design logo. Maybe he took an African art class
and learned about Ciwara there???
This is a film still from the Avengers: Infinity War (2018) when
Shuri heals Vision. While most of the
objects in Shuri’s high tech lab are shiny and new, here (out of
focus) you can see the unmistakeable
outlines of a vertical ciwara on a pedestal in the back ground.
Can anyone get me a better shot of this?
Lorenzo Pace,
Triumph of the Human Spirit, 2000,
black granite, Foley Square, Manhattan
In the mid-1990s I got a
phone call from artist Lorenzo
Pace. He was submitting a
design for a public art
commission for the African
Burial Ground project. He
knew that I had worked in
Mali with Bamana artists and
he wanted to ask me about
the ciwara tradition. He told
me his idea was to base the
massive sculpture on a female
ciwara headdress, and he was
concerned that his design
would not offend Bamana
sensibilities. When he told me
it would be a 20-30 foot high
stone, my first thought was to
say that a Banana farmer
would not recognize it. What
do you think?
https://www.nycgovparks.org/
parks/thomas-paine-park/
highlights/19692http://lorenzopace.com/triumph-of-the-human-
spirit/
Antelope Headdresses and Champion Farmers: Negotiating
Meaning and Identity
through the Bamana Ciwara Complex
Stephen R. Wooten
African Arts, Vol. 33, No. 2. (Summer, 2000), pp. 18-33+89-90.
Stable URL:
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Pullo (Fulani) man
However, there is historical significance to the
Dogon including the Fulani as characters in their
masquerade. Pullo (or Peul or Fulani) refers to an
ethnic group that is found throughout Mali and in
fact across much of the Sahel/Savannah region of
West Africa. In the past they were herders who
moved with their cattle seasonally in search of
pastures for grazing. There is often a symbiotic
relationship between the Fulani and different farming
groups, they need each other, but there is also
tension when times are hard. The current political
crisis in Mali has inflamed tensions between the
Dogon and their Fulani neighbors.
Dieterlen identifies the “real name” of the
masquerade character known as Pullo as dyobi, or
as the runner. She says it represents the rebellious
Ogo before his transformation into the fox.
According to Dieterlen (seen here on the right), Ogo
lost the ability to speak when he was transformed into
a fox, but he is able to communicate through sand
divination. The diviner clears an area, creates a grid in
the sand, and marks it with sticks and pebbles. And he
leave a bit of bait to attract the fox (a descendant of
Ogo) who comes at night and disturbs the pattern in
ways that can be read by the diviner the next morning.
Sand divination (foot prints of the fox/Ogo)
Pullo (Fulani) women
Fulani women are known for their elaborate hairstyles and their
beauty, so it is not a
surprise that the Dogon would incorporate them into their
masquerade tradition. They
are part of the Dogon world, selling milk from their cattle in
local markets. Male Dogon
dancers wear bead, fiber, and cowrie shell headdresses that
emulate the traditional
crested hairstyle, and they wear pointy fake breasts, and they
dance on stilts.
This is a page from Griaule’s first book that presents his
documentation of
the walu mask: its name in the Dogon language, a description of
what it looks
like, the fact that he holds a stick that he paws the ground with
plant grain.
He is afraid of children who provoke him. Griaule provides the
song that is
sung, and the origin myth: about an antelope that killed some of
the sheep
and goats belonging to the villagers, and so they dug a hole and
trapped it.
Walu antelope mask
Walu antelope mask:
Dieterlen tells us that the walu antelope is a
character from the time of Amma’s creation of
the Earth, but Griaule’s documentation there is
also an origin story about a hunter who killed
the antelope and created the mask to honor the
spirit of the antelope. The question is, was the
character introduced to the masquerade
because of what happened to the hunter and
then identified with the Amma creation myth?
A walu antelope and rabbit masquerade he
photographed by Paul Lane performing
during a dama funeral performance.
Satimbe/Yasigi (mask with a
female character on top) said to
represent the first woman who
tried on the red fibers before the
young Dogon men took them
from her. She became the
“sister” of the masquerade, who
honors the women who provide
millet beer during a funeral.
Dieterlen says she represents the
female twin of Ogo known as
Yasigi, who was just as much or a
trouble maker as Ogo/Fox.
Rabbit (Hare)
Griaule documented some 65 different types of mask characters
including various
animals, birds, and both Dogon and non-Dogon characters or
personages
Monkey
Paul Lane is an archaeologist who went to Dogon country to do
ethnographic
research on the household goods and other kinds of material
culture. Below on
the left are ground floor plans of specific houses Lane chose to
document
because they help archaeologists understand what they find
when the excavate.
On the right is a page from Griaule’s first book when
he was documenting traditional Dogon culture, before
he became “obsessed” with cosmology.
Photo taken by Griaule in the 1930s. He
says that women rush to leave the open
plaza because the masqueraders are
about to arrive. While the women may
avoid direct contact with the masquerade,
they often watch from their rooftops and
are certainly aware of what is going on.
Photo taken by LIFE photographer Eliot
Elisofon in 1959 of a funeral ceremony.
The women stand back as men honor the
deceased by firing their guns. The
ceremony is to guide the soul of the
deceased to the afterlife.
The photograph (on the left) depicts men firing blank charges
during mock battles intended to guide
the spirit of the deceased onto the path to the afterlife. "The
Dogon believe that after death, the spirit
of the deceased is not immediately transformed into an ancestor.
It is when in this state that a person's
spirit can be most malevolent and dangerous. Funerals, bago
bundo, which are held several weeks, and
sometimes months, after burial, are public rites at which agnatic
and affinal kin venerate the life and
actions of the deceased." [Lane P., 1988: Settlement as History:
A Study of Space and Time among the
Dogon of Mali. University of Cambridge.]. During his trip to
Mali, Elisofon visited the Dogon people in
Sanga (Sangha), a group of thirteen villages lying east of
Bandiagara at the top of an escarpment. The
photograph depicts men firing blank charges during mock
battles intended to guide the spirit of the
deceased onto the path to the afterlife. This photograph was
taken when Eliot Elisofon was on
assignment for Life magazine and traveled to Africa from
August 18, 1959 to December 20, 1959.
Lane recorded this ceremony with firing of guns at a funeral in
1983.
While in Dogon country, Lane witnessed both ritual damas and
masked performances done for
tourists. Although other scholars have assumed that tourism is
harmful to traditional culture,
Lane suggests that the Dogon people understand the difference
between an elaborate ritual
ceremony (the dama) performed for a deceased elder and short
performances of the masks that
are done for tourists. He suggests that the two can and do co-
exist.
Dutch
anthropologist
Walter van Beek
who was
memorialized in
a new mask type
representing the
white
anthropologist
In the film (African Art video below) the narrator talks to
Samuel Sidibe who says that tourism has affected the kinds
of masks that perform even in ritual contexts — cultural
selection by tourism — because tourists want to see the
“traditional” like the kanaga. But she also mentions that
the Dogon have incorporated new types into their
repertoire, including “the white anthropologist.”
Dogon dancers posing for a group photo for
tourists, and tourists posing with masked dancers.
A sampling of Dogon masquerade dancers. Dieterlen says that
the only mask types that matter
are the ones that can be identified with Dogon cosmology (the
myths of origin described by
Ogotemmeli). She says the “new” types are temporary (and thus
not significant). But others
would argue that Dogon mask characters emerge out of
historical events and situations (like
white anthropologists coming to study them), and that as part of
the living culture of the
Dogon, it is inevitable that the characters will change and that
ritual beliefs with change.
In 2003 Mali was represented at the
Smithsonian Institutions’ Folklife Festival
that usually happens every summer on the
Mall in DC. There were artists, musicians,
and dance performances, including this
Dogon dancer, here casually strolling
among the tourists. They even brought
masons from Jenne to built a gateway in
traditional style in the middle of the Mall.
https://festival.si.edu/past-program/2003/mali-from-
timbuktu-to-washington
DOGON
Mali
15th -21st century AD
front speech
clear speech
Amma
Nommo
Ogo (fox/jackal)
Dama ceremony
kanaga mask
sirige mask
pullo
walu antelope mask
satimbe mask
Marcel Griaule
Ogotemmeli
Germaine Dieterlen
Paul Lane
falaise=cliffs
“Dogon country” or “Pays Dogon”
east of the Inland Niger Delta is a
very different environment. Instead
of rich flat farm land where rice fields
benefit with regular flooding, the
Bandiagara Cliffs that stretch between
the towns of Bandiagara and
Douentza are steep and dry.
Around the time of the Empire of
Ghana (11th-12th century) this region
was occupied by people archaeologists
called Tellem. They buried their dead in
caves in the cliffs. They had a basket and
pulley system to lift the corpse and
other funerary offerings up to the caves.
The Dogon arrived in this region
around the 15th century CE. They
sought refuge here from wars and the
slave-raiding cavalry of the Empire of
Mali and subsequent powerful states in
the region. They built their homes up
against the cliffs and farmed out on
the plains below.
What you see here are stone
and mud masonry granaries
(storage bins for grain) safely
tucked away up in the cliffs,
not easy to get to.
This is a page from Griaule’s first book (Masques Dogon) about
Dogon masquerade. Here he was documenting the movements
of the dancers on the 4th and 5th days of the sigui festival.
In the 1930s, the French
anthropologist Marcel Griaule
went to Dogon country to do
research on masquerade
traditions and beliefs. At first he
spent time simply documenting
what he saw, identifying the
different characters represented
by the masks, recording the
songs, recording the dance steps,
and the symbolism of the masks.
As Germain Dieterlen says in the article you are supposed to
read on Blackboard, the
information Griaule provided in that first book (Masques
Dogon) was what the Dogon call
“front speech,” information given to children and strangers.
Dieterlen was a student of
Griaule’s, and part of a team of scholars who spent a lot of time
studying with the Dogon.
Griaule had heard about an elderly blind hunter named
Ogotemmeli, who was known as a
diviner and knowledgeable elder. In the 1940s he began a
series of conversations with
Ogotemmeli to expand his understanding of Dogon religious
beliefs or cosmology, what
Dieterlen calls “clear speech.” This was published in a later
book that focuses on
cosmology called Conversations with Ogotemmeli (translated
from the French)
Germaine Dieterlen
Cosmology: Dogon Creation Myth
There are many variations of this myth (and Dieterlen
provides confusing details), but here are some key elements:
Creator God Amma brought the world into existence
including the Earth from a lump of clay. The first creatures he
created was Ogo who was born prematurely. In some versions
he is the result of an illicit sexual act between Amma and Earth
(rape), or the result of incest between Ogo and the Earth
(either way something that broke taboos). Ogo rebelled and
was transformed into a fox (or a jackal) and lost the ability to
speak. Amma then created four pairs of twins known as
Nommo, one of which was sacrificed when they were sent to
populate Earth. The surviving twins are said to be the mythical
ancestors of the present-day Dogon people.
These stools with pairs of bisexual twins represent the
creation myth visually, with the central post representing the
arc that Amma created and sent to Earth.
Other aspects of the myth include the origin of death among
the Dogon — a myth that provides an explanation for the
origin of death, the role of masquerade in accompanying the
deceased to the afterlife, and ritual roles for men and women.
The film we watched in class that is posted on Blackboard as
African Art video (watch the
part about the Dogon again … about halfway through) addresses
concerns that other
scholars have had about all of this research, saying that while it
may represent the very
esoteric beliefs of a small number of elders like Ogotemmeli, all
filtered through Griaule’s
own beliefs (and possibly leading questions during these
conversations), it does not
necessarily represent the beliefs of Dogon society at large then
or now.
The fact is that beliefs are complicated and they are understood
differently by individuals within
society. There is no one single TRUTH about what “The Dogon”
believe then or now. So read both
Dieterlen and Paul Lane, watch the films, and pay attention to
the kind of information they present.
Think about how they got their information, who they asked,
and imagine what you might want to
ask, if you were able to travel to Dogon country and conduct
research yourself.
In the film Samuel Sidibe (then Director of the
National Museum in Mali) suggests that foreign
researchers, especially Griaule and Dieterlen,
were obsessed with finding mythic origins, and
did not recognize that Dogon culture is a
“living” culture, like any other, that beliefs
change and evolve over time (and space).
Another myth has to do with the origin of death among
the Dogon, a myth that also explains something of the
importance of the masquerade. Again, there are different
versions of this, but in one version, a woman who
represents the descendants of Ogo (Andoumboulou)
discovered some blood stained red fibers (possibly a
reference to menstrual blood or childbirth) and put them
on to scare some Dogon men. At first they were
frightened (in mythic tradition, men are often petrified of
menstrual blood), but then they thought it would be fun
to put on these fiber costumes. According to
Ogotemmeli, death among the Dogon was originally a
transformation from human form to that of a snake, and
from speech to silence. In this tradition an elderly Dogon
man was in the process of transformation when he saw
the young men wearing these red fiber costumes and he
was horrified because of the danger. He cried out,
something that broke the taboo of transformation into a
snake, and he died immediately, and this was the origin of
death among the Dogon. In addition, this also explains the
importance of the red fibers that are a critical element of
Dogon masquerade costume, possible more important
that the individual masks. Every generation puts on those
red fibers to atone for the sins of those first young men,
and this then condemns them to death as well.
Great Mask = sigui (sigi)
Every 60 years, the
Dogon celebrate and
remember that first
ancestor who died with
a special performance
known as Sigui (Sigi).
The huge mask created
for this ceremony
represents a snake. The
French “discovered” the
remains of 9 such
masks in these sacred
caves where they were
stored. Do the math,
this would mean that
the first one was carved
and danced some 540
years earlier, that is,
about when the Dogon
arrived in the region in
the 15th century.
There is often some
historical truth in oral
traditions.
This is a photograph of some of
these sigui masks “collected” by
the French in the 1930s and
brought back to Paris where they
went into the collections of the
Trocadero Musee de l’Homme
(Anthropology Museum), now the
Musee du Quai Branly
A variety of Dogon masks on
display in a museum
Dogon masqueraders performing for a
dama, a funeral ceremony
SIRIGE: a tall checkerboard plank mask
• Stars in great numbers, infinite
galaxies in the universe
• Ogo’s journey to Earth
• the path of the Nommos’ ark
• many-storied family house
(reference to many generations)
above: a page from Griaule’s Masques
Dogons, that shows representations of
sirige masks on the walls of painted caves
KANAGA:
• Movement of Amma’s hand in
creating the world
• A bird (stork)
Compare these drawings of this kanaga
dancer to the movements of kanaga
dancers in the different films
Met Museum
Mask (Kanaga)
20th century
Dogon peoples
One of the most popular types of masks in the Sanga region is
the type known as
kanaga. Like other Dogon masks, kanaga masks are worn at
rituals called dama,
whose goal is to transport the souls of deceased family members
away from the
village and to enhance the prestige of the deceased and his
descendants by
magnificent masked performances and generous displays of
hospitality. In 1935,
French anthropologist Marcel Griaule witnessed a dama ritual in
which twenty-nine
out of a total of seventy-four masks were of the kanaga type.
These masks are
characterized by a wooden superstructure in the form of a
double-barred cross with
short vertical elements projecting from the tips of each
horizontal bar.
This kanaga mask was collected in Mali by Lester Wunderman,
complete with its
costume elements. When the mask is worn, the back of the
dancer's head is covered
with a hood of plaited fiber fringe at the bottom edge. The
dancer wears a vest made
of black strip-woven cloth and red broadcloth strips
embroidered with white
cowrie-shells; strands of glass and plastic beads dangle from its
edges. The kanaga
dancer also wears a pair of trousers made of indigo-dyed, strip-
woven cotton cloth,
over which he ties a long skirt of curly, loosely strung, black-
dyed sanseveria fibers
and short overskirts of straight red and yellow fibers. For a
traditional dama, the
preparation and dyeing of the fibers are undertaken with as
much secrecy and ritual
as the carving of the wooden mask.
During the time spent by Griaule among the Dogon studying
their complex belief
system, he was initially told that the kanaga mask represents a
bird with white wings
and black forehead, but he later came to see this literal
interpretation as
characteristic of the first level of knowledge, that of the
uninitiated. The deeper
meaning of the kanaga mask apparently pertains both to God,
the crossbars being his
arms and legs, and to the arrangement of the universe, with the
upper crossbar
representing the sky and the lower one the earth. The disparity
between these two
interpretations illustrates the gaps in our understanding of
Dogon art.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Dogon%
20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize
=0
Masks and Mythology among the Dogon
Germaine Dieterlen
African Arts, Vol. 22, No. 3. (May, 1989), pp. 34-43+87-88.
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%3B2-M
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The Architecture of Islam in West Africa
Author(s): Labelle Prussin
Source: African Arts, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Winter, 1968), pp. 32-
35+70-74
Published by: UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3334324
Accessed: 14-06-2019 17:17 UTC
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars,
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UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center is
collaborating with JSTOR to digitize,
preserve and extend access to African Arts
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..... .......4.
-.k:4 7
Em'i
7A
(4) Mosque at Djenne: Interior
Labelle Prussin The mosque expresses
the crystallization in
three dimensions of the
unique synthesis between
Islamic cultural features
and the cultures of
indigenous West African
societies.
THE ARCHITECTURE OF
ISLAM
IN WEST AFRICA
L'architecture a et l'art le plus n~glig6 de l'Afrique: elle a 4t6
6tudiee par les anthropologues et les archbologues qui ne la
considerent
pas sous son aspect artistique.
A cette disaffection s'ajoute la supposition superficielle que
l'usage
de l'argile, parce qu'elle est une matiere qui manque de
permanence,
rend la construction trop 6phimere pour justifier des recherches
shrieuses.
Les mosquies de l'Afrique occidentale, en fait, d6ploient une
varit&6
de styles et de formes dont la parfaite harmonie entre la beaut6
struc-
turelle et la conception fonctionelle donne naissance A une
forme d'art
digne d'un grand int&ret.
Le d6veloppement de leurs styles peut tre suivi au travers de la
chronologie (par exemple, la penetration islamique) ou des
conditions
g6ographiques (par exemple, le climat). Il aboutit ' une
monumen-
talit6 qui est bien un caractere propre ~al 'architecture.
Labelle Prussin analyse la mosquie soudanaise qu'elle divise en
cinq
vari6tes: Timbouctou, Djenn6, Bobo Dioulasso, Kong, et
Kawara. Du
point de vue socio-politico-g,ographique, les caracteres
architecturaux
de chaque type reflftent les caracteres distinctifs de la r6gion.
En d6pit
des variations qui modifient I'aspect de la mosqu6e du nord au
sud,
on peut cependant ais6ment identifier son style. La mosqu6e
est une
expression concrete du symbolisme, le reflet d'une culture ' un
moment
particulier dans le temps-bref, tout ce qui contribue a d~finir
les
canons de l'architecture.
The presence of Islam is immediately demonstrated by the
mosques,
simple or elaborate, set against the skylines of many West
African
towns. Miss Prussin, an architect who has lived in Africa for
several
years, here analyzes the stylistic features characterizing these
buildings.
She argues for their importance both as an art form and as
evidence
of the synthesis which results when man seeks to achieve
monumentality
as a testimony of his faith.
Numbers within parentheses refer to illustrations.
O f all the arts of sub-Saharan
Africa, architecture has remained an
orphan child. Sculpture, music, the
dance, have come into their own, but
architecture has remained, with rare
exception, an unrecognized art, rel-
egated to the realm of anthropology
or archeology; even in these disci-
plines, references are in the nature of
fleeting glimpses, tangential to the
main focus of their concern. This lack
of attention to African architecture
cannot be surprising when one con-
siders the reasons which account for
such a lacuna in the African Arts.
First, perhaps, is the almost complete
absence of field studies with an archi-
tectural orientation. Ethnographic field-
work in Africa has been carried out
on a micro-level, anthropologically
oriented and geographically localized.
A researcher may see and record the
building activity of a particular ethnic
grouping in the area of his concentra-
tion, but either current disfavor to-
wards studies in material culture or
the researcher's own lack of architec-
tural perceptiveness will prevent him
from noting the subtleties which an-
nounce the presence of an architectural
motif. Ethnographic provincialism, the
result of in-depth study, has deprived
him of a spatial perspective. Not since
the aerial framework of Frobenius'
32 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun
2019 17:17:02 UTC
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(1) Sankore mosque at Timbucktoo
2 i .l
is
.
'II
S'C
Cs~?
* *~
1d
... . . . : ... . '
!"
(2) Tomb of Askia Muhamed at Gao
i? ; a." . , . J , ;f Y
:?
.:. .". ., ;. "
.U . .......
. .-.. . . .. . . ?....
ii!. :-'.:" :~;;1. "- . .-?a-r?? -:?I : . ??;--i;?-i4'~~?:: .:,.. ,. . . ..
(,,o. ,. - . .,. ., . . ?~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~? r-':,.:..-.,.-:,::"... ,...,
(10) Mosque at Kawara
t 7
(3) Mosque at Djenne
slur
Akp.
li ''
33
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17:17:02 UTC
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b"Y" ~~~Pi~
,x
S-~is~~i~t~t;f~` If 'l
r n Y*l
i?90;i:iS4 =~C;i
i~*:: ~i~F~t~?
;ri
i.. ;.r
,,
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Ids~ "???s;c?! I??i~,~q
,... ?n ??k ;~,~C4C ?~*7
?a 9lp~'j?
*'' i ~ds~ s
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E.'*x ~r ~r:
?, .
r "i
xre
tf
a:
?i ;
1"
i.:
??lp3 Ir:;
ii.
i? r~a --splla i Ei
?ilii
.". 1"'
i!
:?.
V
i ;i. ?e
i 1~ ~91~
": I ~.j*i;~ 4x~ ~air-~ I ~i~%a~-~bZ~~:~;-~I~ ?"j~J;I~-;;-
.?;~aaa~d~llZr-iqpl~;~?
Ii _---F~Ciii~-I~Y lrl ~:?I?? ??*1*
3" ~B~?C?~ ? -? ? -1 -- 01~' f i "I-
??;~L.*r???:i:r;liiWuP*l??~~ F1~' r-t~ll I~r~k~;...~
~Lluru(i?YLdjl~?Pl~i:
(7) Mosque at Bobo Dioulasso
Monumentality is
achieved through a sense
of verticality.
Kulturkreise, albeit theoretically un-
fashionable today, has consideration
been given to the geographic or sty-
listic extensiveness of architectural
forms in sub-Saharan Africa.
Secondly, the building technology
of sub-Saharan Africa is based on ma-
terials of short durability: the life-span
of building structures is comparatively
short. Mud is not considered a respect-
able architectural medium, since his-
torically, in the architectural perspec-
tive, monumentality is associated with
permanence. Stone construction is al-
most non-existent today, and what re-
mains of stone monuments from past
centuries has scarcely been uncovered
by the limited resources devoted to
African archeology.
Third, and perhaps most important
is the attitude, shared by architect and
layman alike, that building in sub-
Saharan Africa is not architecture at
all, but at most, building technology:
shelter is seen only in terms of the
techniques which its builder com-
mands, and not in terms of its aesthetic
value. The most generous critic will
award it the term Urarchitektur, the
less generous critic, the term primitive
(5) Mosque at Mopti
ii:. ?ci4$t.. 4p Nz I
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shelter. Such an attitude is reminiscent
of early approaches to African sculp-
ture. Imbued with an aesthetic sense
socially conditioned by Western philos-
ophy, the critic viewed the examples
of African sculpture which had found
their way to the ethnographic mu-
seums of Europe, as immature at-
tempts to represent nature. Failing to
realize that the bases of reference in
Africa differed greatly from those of
Europe, the critic failed to place these
examples in their proper perspective.
As a consequence, a penetrating anal-
ysis and study of African aesthetics
was, until recently, impossible. Un-
fortunately, such Victorian attitudes
still prevail with regard to African
architecture.
The savannah belt of West Africa,
an area paralleling the equator, travels
east to west and extends from the
ancient emporia strung out along the
bend of the Niger River to the pe-
riphery of the rainforest. Within this
belt, the Western Sudan and more
specifically the boucle du Niger and
the Voltaic Basin are of particular
concern to us here. This area is asso-
ciated with three important historical
sequences: the diaspora of the Mande-
speaking people, the northwestern
trade routes linking the Niger emporia
to Kumasi and the Guinea Coast, and
the activities related to the jihad of
Samori in the late nineteenth century.
It is here that a particular type of
mosque abounds which Frobenius,
Marty, Trimingham, and others have
termed Sudanese, so called simply be-
cause it was found in the former
French Sudan. From an historical point
of view, this area is to be distinguished
from its eastern counterpart where
Hausa state formation, the Fulani
jihads, and the consequences of the
northeastern trans-Saharan trade routes
gave rise to a different kind of archi-
tectural expression.
In any savannah environment, and
the West African savannah is no ex-
ception, mud is used almost exclusively
as an indigenous building material by
sedentary peoples. But mud can be
used in many ways, and indigenous
building, diverse in both its forms and
in the functions it serves, evidences a
wide range of types. The circular
roundhouse clusters, capped by their
thatched roof bonnets and dispersed
over the arid landscape, are at one end
of the range. At the other end are the
flat-roofed, rectangular houses replete
with pierced parapet walls, crowded
into tightly nucleated villages which
appear in the distance as small, forti-
fied medieval towns. Intermingled with
this range of sedentary buildings are
the various nomadic .transient shelters
of thatch, woven mats, or skins, whose
Continued on p. 70

i . a
i i
Statue, 4th-5th Century BC, now exhibited at Addis Ababa
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FRANKFURT
ROME
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KHARTOUM CAIRO KARACHI--DELHI ASMARA ADEN
ACCRA- LAGOS ADDIS-ABABA - DJDIBOUTI
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MRLINj LJIEIN S
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Visit the nearest T Office or your Travel Agent
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"C'est
magnitique"
Le Californien, journal frangais
de la c6te Pacifique
accueille avec enthousiasme
AFRICAN ARTS IARTS D'AFRIQUE
nouvelle revue bilingue consacr6e
aux Arts de l'Afrique
sous toutes leurs formes.
UNE BONNE IDEE
abonnez-vous des pr6sent "
AFRICAN ARTS I/ARTS D'AFRJQUE
un an, 50 NF (6tudiants et
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DES RELATIONS D'AFFAIRES
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pourquoi ne pas faire un
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les exemplaires fournis en gros
b6n6ficieront de conditions spdciales.
Toute demande de renseignements
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peut &tre adress6e ~:
airican arts/arts d'afrique
Universit6 de Californie,
Los Angeles, California 90024
Continued from p. 35
occupants live in symbiotic relation-
ship with their sedentary mud-building
neighbors.
Whether this broad range of build-
ing types, each with its attendent tech-
nology, constitutes architecture, is still
open to question. However, the Su-
danese mosque, appearing as a singu-
lar, unified form throughout the area,
seems to evidence many of the cur-
rently prescribed canons of architec-
ture. It pervades the area, dominating
a wealth of ethnic building diversity.
Stylized and symbolic, it is immediately
identifiable visually. While some degree
of modification occurs in the form as
it disperses across the savannah belt,
the basic form remains, recognizable
and distinctive.
When discussing almost any topic
relating to the Western Sudan, one fact
must be kept in mind: the presence of
Islam-a force which pervades all as-
pects of the community in which it is
found. It is Islam as a force that gave
rise to the mosques, palaces, and tombs
found there. In recent years, what can
be referred to as the Architecture of
Islam has been studied in great detail
by such authorities as Creswell, Ter-
rasse, and others; however, their ex-
tensive fieldwork was concerned with
the Near East, North Africa, and
southern Spain, not with sub-Saharan
Africa. A scholar interested in the archi-
tecture of Islam in this part of the
world must comb through available
material contained in Arabic sources,
in accounts by eighteenth and nine-
teenth century explorers and travelers,
in archeological reports, and in micro-
ethnographic descriptions. Further, in
order to understand the Islamic archi-
tecture of the Western Sudan, it is
necessary to become familiar with the
history of Islamic penetration into
West Africa, i.e., the processes of syn-
thesis which took place between the
evangelists of Islam and the indigenous
cultures they encountered, as well as
with the nature of the cultures them-
selves. Only then does it become pos-
sible to comprehend architecturally not
only the mosque, but the tomb and
the palace. Only then is it possible to
trace the impact of Islam on indige-
nous building forms.
While the architecture of the Su-
danese mosque derives from North
Africa, Islamic architecture in West
Africa is nevertheless unique. It is a
corruption of neither Egyptian nor
North African form but expresses in
its essence the adjustments and modi-
fications to the highly ritualized char-
acter of Islam, which specifically pre-
scribes both the floor plan of a mosque
and the activities relevant to its use.
THE ARCHITECTURE OF ISLAM
Although elsewhere Islamic archi-
tecture generally includes palaces and
tombs as well as mosques, in West
Africa it is the mosque which embodies
Islam. Palaces and tombs are promi-
nent only during the span of the Is-
lamic empires of Ghana, Mali, and
Songhai. They appeared only when
commercial development fostered the
growth of urban centers and generated
the emergence of class groupings.
These in turn subsumed the preceding
network of kinship relationships and
permitted the establishment of an in-
cipient state structure, at whose seats
in the urban centers the sites of pal-
aces and tombs were to be found. On
the other hand, the mosque as an
architectural feature is omnipresent,
both spatially and temporally, despite
the formal variations which may occur
in its diaspora from north to south.
The spread of Islam into the west-
ern savannah falls into a number of
historical phases. These phases each
represent, in turn, a new cultural
pattern, varying with the process of
acculturation to Islam. If an architec-
tural style is a manifestation of a cul-
ture as a whole, representing the crys-
tallization of a number of cultural
dimensions-not only those of environ-
ment and technology, but those of so-
cial, political, and economic spheres as
well-it should be possible to relate
the qualitative variables, which the
mosque evidences, to the historical
phases through which Islam passed. It
is, in fact, this interplay between the
various cultural dimensions, changing
over time and space in their physical
expression, that constitutes the fabric
of architectural history.
Formal modifications, which take
place in the mosque as it travels from
north to south, pertain to size and scale,
structure itself, finesse of construction
and detail, definition of plane surfaces
and the degree of verticality, as well
as to the deviations from the prescribed
plan layout which Islamic orthodoxy
demands. This gradual formal trans-
formation results from many factors,
of which the changes in climatic con-
ditions, the present and available build-
ing materials, and the techniques and
skills of construction are but a few.
Equally important are the location of
the mosque in an urban or rural milieu,
the method by which it was estab-
lished in the area-whether by a single
marabout, by a migrant people, or the
result of state-building activity-and
the degree of acceptance or rejection
of Islam and the related cultural at-
tributes of Islam by a host group.
The architecture of the Sudanese
mosque is, like its substrata of savan-
70
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nah building technology, essentially
mud architecture. While mud as a
building material permits great flexi-
bility and fluidity in the treatment of
plane surfaces, it imposes great limita-
tions upon potential structural form.
Thus, within the discipline of the ma-
terial, a number of basic variations
emerge. These variations group them-
selves into five categories: the Tim-
bucktu, Djenne, Bobo Dioulasso, Kong,
and Kawara types. This classification
relates not only to alteration in the
formal arrangement of minarets, stairs,
and inner courtyards, which are the
result of deviation from prescribed
practice and politics of orthodox Islam,
but to stylistic and qualitative dimen-
sions as well. In turn, these five types
find correlation with the historical pe-
riods of Islam's penetration into West
Africa and with the changing cultural
character of each period.
The first phase in the spread of Islam
into the Western Sudan began with
the influx of Arabized Berber traders
and clerics from Mauretania, reaching
its apex in the adoption of Islam as
an imperial cult. This expansion, per-
sonified in the fame of Mansa Musa
and Askia Muhamed I, was centered
in the great urban trading capitals of
first, Timbucktu (see Illustration 1) and
then, Gao. Islam as an imperial cult
was an urban phenomenon, limited to
the immediate trading community.
Here it existed side by side with a
mosaic of indigenous African religions.
The lack of both a rural base and con-
flict with traditional rule lent a dualist
character to Islam. It is to this phase
of Islamic history that the Timbucktu
type, exemplified in both the Djingue-
reber and the Sankore mosques, as
well as in the tomb of Askia Muhamed
at Gao (2), corresponds.
Its appearance is limited to a few
major urban centers, at that time entre-
pots of trans-Saharan trade and the
seats of precarious empires. The massive
scale and the pyramidal minarets gen-
erate an extreme feeling of heaviness, a
heaviness further accentuated by the
lack of plane definition. The minarets
are built up solidly of mud, permitting
only a shaft-like access to their roofs.
The exterior surface of the minarets
are pierced by projecting timbers
which, while appearing haphazard,
nevertheless provide permanent scaf-
folding for the maintenance of mud
wall surfaces-a requirement imposed
by climatic conditions. They also trans-
mit the stresses which are set up when
a mass of mud is subjected to rapid
changes in humidity and temperature.
The timbers thus serve to concentrate
the resultant cracking along prescribed
lines.
Tradition credits the introduction of
the Sudanese building style as a whole,
and the Timbucktu type in particular,
to an Andalusian poet, Es-Saheli, who
was brought back by Mansa Musa on
his return from a grand pilgrimage to
Mecca. However, the tradition has
been questioned by a number of au-
thorities. Architectural style is rarely
set by a single designer functioning
out of his milieu. The adaptation of a
style requires a supporting technology
and skills derivative of the cultural set-
ting into which it is introduced, both
of which were lacking at Timbucktu.
Timbucktu never developed as a
center of Negro-Islamic learning, de-
spite the existence of a university center
there. It never became a true city-state,
and its peoples remained heterogene-
ous, never constituting a unified group.
The city was kept in a continual state
of insecurity by its own disunity and
by the continual harassment of no-
madic Tuareg tribes. Thus the architec-
ture of its mosques, while massive and
powerful in scale, remains heavy and
crude. Nonetheless, these Great
Mosques do represent the most ancient
prototype of Islamic architecture in
West Africa, a prototype which has
persisted in time. Although the recon-
struction of the Sankore mosque is of
recent date, it continues to embody
the earlier form.
Contrary to general impression, it
was Djenne rather than Timbucktu
which developed not only into a more
stable center of trade, but became the
intellectual seat of Negro-Islamic learn-
ing. As a city-state, Djenne was sup-
ported in its hinterland by a strong
agricultural foundation, and its posi-
tion on the Bani River protected it
with an admirable network of water-
ways. As a consequence, it was not
subject to the same ravages which be-
leaguered Timbucktu. Djenne marks a
second phase in Islamic history, a
phase in which Negro-Islamic culture
flourished over a number of centuries.
With the growth of a stable, urban
milieu, there developed the skilled
craftsmanship so essential for the
growth of an articulate architecture.
Djenne's cityscape is characterized by
a distinctive, carefully articulated ar-
chitectural flavor, a flavor which be-
comes crystallized in its mosque. Since
climatic restrictions placed upon mud
construction within the Niger flood
plains are no different than those fur-
ther north, contrast with the Timbucktu
type can only be explained culturally.
The Djenne type of mosque(3),
paralleling the apical role and position
of Djenne in West African history, ap-
pears as a quintessence of architectural
form. Formal elements are carefully
and sharply defined in the interplay of
wall surfaces, in parapet construction,
and through the use and placement of
wooden dentils obtained by cutting the
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in New York:
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in Auckland, New Zealand:
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in Brussels:
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in Chicago:
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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
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trunks of the fan palm. The symmetry
of its facade, composed of three major
minarets rhythmically interspersed
with absolutely vertical buttresses,
competes with the best traditions of
the Beaux Arts. Above all, it achieves
a sense of verticality--one of those
canons of architecture--unrivalled in
this part of the world. In contrast to
the Timbucktu type which possesses
only a feeling for mass, the Djenne
mosque achieves a remarkable sense
of spatial enclosure. The minarets are
not built up of a mass of solid material,
but rather enclose an ample set of
spiral mud stairs which leads upwards
to the roof from where the muezzin
calls the faithful to prayer: the mina-
rets are thus an expression of their
true function. The incorporation of the
minaret as an integral element of the
facade itself marks an innovation in
mosque design. The mosque interior
with its rhythmic definition of space
might, with a bit of imagination, easily
satisfy the criterion of loftiness with
which Gothic architecture endows the
cathedral(4). Its setting, conforming
to the classic tenets of urban design,
provides a formal approach which per-
mits the viewer to marvel at the mag-
nitude of its scale and structure, a
magnitude enhanced by the residual
architecture which serves as its back-
drop.
The Djenne prototype can be found
in a number of large towns bordering
the Niger flood plains, such as at
Mopti(5) and San(6). The mosques at
Mopti and San, although reputed to
have been built by Djenne craftsmen,
do not retain the qualitative level of
the Djenne mosque. The one at Mopti,
while retaining the finesse of detail and
an equally sharp delineation of surfaces
in its buttressing, is deprived of some
of its monumentality by both the ab-
sence of a plaza-type approach and the
lack of a strongly defined facade sym-
metry. The mosque at San, while very
much a replica of Djenne in regard to
symmetry and approach, suffers in the
articulation of its detail, the sharpness
of delineation, and in its verticality.
While the mosques at Timbucktu,
dating back many centuries, have been
continuously modified as a result of
annual maintenance, the mosque at
Djenne and its replicas are of recent
vintage, dating from the turn of this
century. It would seem that the per-
sistence of a constant form over such
a great span of time provides one of
the keys to an understanding of their
unique quality. They remain a testi-
mony to the early centuries of Islamic
penetration into West Africa, marking
a period of expansive state-building
activity.
The Djenne and Timbucktu types
eventually merge, giving rise centuries
later to two new variations: the Bobo
Dioulasso (7) and the Kong(8) types,
both found in the southerly savannah
reaches of the Western Sudan, in an
area encompassed by the activities rel-
evant to the Samori fihad. Both types
relate to the dispersion of and the col-
onization by Mande peoples moving
down from the northwest, a diaspora
initiated and led by their trading
classes. Although the Mande immi-
grants into the southern savannah
zones were pagan, the trading classes
among them were Muslims. It was the
Muslim Mande traders who, extending
their commercial activities over vast
areas of what is now the northern
Ivory Coast, northwestern Ghana, and
the southern Upper Volta, created the
commercial centers around which Mus-
lim communities grew. However, these
centers were in large measure autono-
mous, their solidarity reinforced through
isolation. Where their commercial ac-
tivity enabled them to increase their
influence over the surrounding pagan
communities, they were able to gain
political control and to form small
village-states. Thus, Bobo Dioulasso
and Kong types are an expression of a
politico-religious structure vested in a
village---in contrast to the earlier large
mosques which were symbolic of an
imperial organization. As a conse-
quence, they are much smaller in scale
and lack the monumentality which
characterize both the Timbucktu and
Djenne types. They appear as small,
modified scale models of their north-
ern counterparts. Distinctions between
the Bobo and Kong types rest primar-
ily on an adaptation to climatic condi-
tions, rather than on distinctions in
cultural tradition.
At Bobo Dioulasso, the vertical but-
tressing so sharply delineated at Djenne
is still discernible, as are the dominat-
ing minarets derivative of Timbucktu.
However, the flaring out and thicken-
ing of the buttress elements at their
base detracts from the quality of ver-
tical rhythm, a quality still evident but
rapidly disappearming under the on-
slaught of reduced scale and climatic
accommodation. Projecting timbers,
particularly from the two minarets,
still manage to retain a semblance of
regularity, but their multiplicity, cou-
pled with the introduction of horizontal
bracing between the dominant but-
tress forms, detracts further from ver-
ticality. Both innovations are a function
of the increased humidity of the south-
ern savannah. Despite these modifica-
tions, however, the classic mosque
floor plan with its enclosed prayer hall,
its mihrab, its interior courtyard, and
internal stair spiraling within the mina-
ret to the roof, all remain.
Kong, another one-time capital of a
village-state, was an important Muslim
Mande center of commerce, lying
much closer to the rainforest. Timber
here is both more plentiful and avail-
able in greater lengths. But it is never-
theless savannah timber, characterized
by gnarling and distortive growth, in
contrast to the straight grain of the
fan palm which is available further
north. The increased rains require even
heavier buttressing and increased an-
nual maintenance, as well as additional
horizontal reinforcing. The result is an
architectural form which uses and re-
flects a second material: wood. How-
ever, this now extensive use of timber
reinforcing, while creating an interest-
ing contrast of media, at the same time
introduces horizontality as a major de-
sign feature. There is a further decrease
in buttress definition, and a more bul-
bous minaret emerges. The minaret,
now a solid mass of mud, no longer
houses the access stair. It has lost its
function, remaining only as a symbolic
link to Mecca. One almost feels as if
the mosque at Kong does not quite get
off the ground.
The use of timber for horizontal
bracing in the proximity of the rain-
forest is a function of the size of the
mosque. The size of the mosque is
itself a function of the urban milieu.
As a consequence, the use of horizontal
timber bracing in the southern savan-
nah prevails only in the larger mosques,
those found in the centers of what
were once village-states. As one moves
out into the rural landscape, the scale
of the mosque, such as that of Lara-
banga (9), diminishes further, a result
not only of size, but of the broader
based buttressing which the lack of
building skill demands. Islam comes to
the rural scene in the person of a
single marabout, and he builds from
memory a replica of a mosque seen
elsewhere, without benefit of either
supporting skills, technology, or com-
mitment to Islam by the host popula-
tion. The mosque gradually loses any
resemblance, in its plan, to either its
northern counterparts or to the rigid
prescriptions of Islamic orthodoxy. En-
trances, losing their human scale, be-
come diminutive, so that it becomes
Continued on p. 74
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Continued from p. 72
necessary to stoop in order to enter.
The minaret loses its dominant posi-
tion in the design and is hardly dis-
tinguishable from the bulk of buttress-
ing.
Finally, as if to complete the cycle,
the Kawara mosque stands as the
epitomy of a rural mosque(10). Al-
though absolutely fluid in its three di-
mensions, the Kawara type is totally
lacking in either verticality or monu-
mentality. It no longer possesses any
architectural feeling for spatial enclos-
ure, remaining rather with only a sculp-
tural feeling for mass. Architectural
form has dissolved into sculptural
form. The use of the mosque interior
has been abandoned-it no longer has
an architectural function. Its plan bears
no resemblance to the classic mosque
form, and Friday activities take place
in a demarcated open space adjoining
the symbolic structure. It is this type
of mosque, not as well executed, not as
striking, not as consistent in its sculp-
tural fluidity as the Kawara example,
which prevails on the rural savannah
landscape.
Thus, although there exists a singular
architectural style in West Africa, vari-
ous factors have entered into its altera-
tion and modification as it traveled from
the bend of the Niger River to the
periphery of the rainforest in the wake
of Islamic penetration. The modifica-
tion was explained only in part by
attempts to maintain a form arising
out of one set of environmental con-
ditions, in areas where physical condi-
tions were less conducive to its mainte-
nance. A major part of the explanation
lies rather in the less rigid adherence
to the dogma and forms prescribed by
Islamic doctrine. If it is true that archi-
tecture is a conscious expression of
commitment, that it is a physical ex-
pression for symbolism, that it is an
intellectualization of material elements
arranged in three dimensions, that it
is actually a reflection of culture at a
given point in time, then any changes
which take place in that particular
culture are also reflected architectur-
ally. The modifications witnessed in
the mosque form support the above
hypothesis, for indeed the basic revi-
sions to, and the relaxations of, Islamic
dogma, are reflected in the architecture
of the Sudanese mosque.
Architectural expression involves a
constancy of form which gives rise to
a style, an accompanying emotional
involvement by the viewer and the
user, and a monumentality through
which symbolism is achieved. Where
these qualities exist, one can speak of
architecture as being present.
Architecture, unlike the other fine
arts, deals with the problem of use/
utility/function alongside the problem
of symbolic expression. A piece of ar-
chitecture, in addition to being of direct
physical service to man, becomes an
expression of his social and cultural
aspirations. When, as in the case of an
arc de triomphe, the symbolism itself
is its function, the structure created
moves over into the realm of sculpture.
When architectural forms become a
style, they act as a vehicle of expres-
sion for group identification. However,
certain requisites should be fulfilled be-
fore this emotional involvement can
be attached to a physical manifesta-
tion: an institutionalization of that
expression into a system of constant
elements, forms, and qualities within
a society, and the visual identity of a
particular structure through a unity
of formal elements.
As one traces the Sudanese mosque
from its northerly-most Timbucktu
site to its southerly-most Kong site, the
consistency of its form is striking. De-
spite the modifications which occur,
this constancy of symbolic form is so
strong that no matter where one trav-
els, no matter what the indigenous
ethnically defined building patterns
may be, the mosque is immediately
identifiable by its distinctive architec-
tural features.
The use of architectural form to
achieve explicit symbolic statements of
the nature of a society is not unique
in history: the pyramids, the feudal
castle, St. Peters, Versailles, or Brasilia,
as well as the Great Mosques of Kairo-
uan or Cordova are all illustrative of the
cultures which created them. The Su-
danese mosque is no different. It, too, is
a symbolization achieved by emotional
response which a visual identity evokes.
The mosque embodies the role of islam
in West Africa as a religious, political,
and an economic force.
It is also necessary to distinguish the
symbolism of an ancestral shrine from
the symbolism involved in the expres-
sion of a range of socio-political rela-
tionships within society. The shrine
has a symbolic value only for the all-
inclusive role which kinship plays in
a particular society; but when the so-
ciety becomes more differentiated and
S . .; ... i:.. . ... .....
? ~ ~ ~ -? n'i: :: "? : ?i;;::;:+;:ii:+. :? : + ,;
Alil MAN IS
,o .,
(8) Mosque at Kong
the ruling powers are desirous of
maintaining their position, symbolism
achieves permanence through monu-
mentality. Dwellings are not monu-
mental nor are the shrines within them.
Only those edifices which express the
prevailing dominant theme running
through the fabric of a society can
achieve monumentality. In the history
of West Africa it is the mosque, and
not the pagan tribal head's "palace,"
which has achieved architectural monu-
mentality. The mosque becomes an
expression of the multiple role which
Islam played in subsuming the kinship
function and in creating an incipient
state structure. Indigenous cultures
were, in the main, acephalous or poly-
cephalous societies with little political
differentiation. Hence the residences
of tribal rulers, while boasting superb
sculptural appendages, never achieved
the level of architectural definition or
distinction which might lay a base for
monumentality.
Monumentality is achieved formally
through a sense of verticality-both
symbolic and accessible-whether it
be the Sumer ziggurat, the Gothic
spire, the U.N. Building or the Islamic
minaret. One is tempted to use the
prevalence of a vertical quality in the
Sudanese mosque as a measure of
Islam's efficacy within a particular in-
digenous culture as one follows the
basic form in its journey from Djenne
to Kawara.
Architecture has been defined as a
physical expression involving a con-
stancy of form and an accompanying
symbolism. Such symbolism, when all-
encompassing, is embodied in monu-
mentality as a qualitative dimension.
Verticality is one of the means by
which such monumentality is achieved.
All the above noted qualities are pres-
ent, in varying degree, in the Islamic
architecture of West Africa, as em-
bodied in its mosques. Singular and
distinctive, the Sudanese mosques are
three-dimensional crystallizations of
the unique synthesis between the kind
of Islam which penetrated from across
the Sahara and the indigenous cultures
of West Africa-a synthesis nutured in
the savannah environment. I
. . ... . .... .......
?;i~ A 4
Fil . .. .. .. .
. . .. . .. . .. . 4WF
(9) Mosque at Larabanga
74
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17:17:02 UTC
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Contents323334357071727374Issue Table of ContentsAfrican
Arts, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Winter, 1968), pp. 1-88Front Matter [pp. 3-
81]First Word [pp. 1-2]I Saw and I Was Happy: Festival at
Oshogbo [pp. 8-17+85]Return to Origins: New Directions for
African Arts [pp. 18-
25+88]䱥⁔棨浥⁤攠污⁖楯汥湣攮⁄慮猠猠⁒猠猠⁁猠 猠猠猠猠猠猠猠猠⁆猠猠̦
猠猠猠가猠猠㤶㈠孰瀮′㘭㌱⬷㔭㜷�The Architecture of Islam in West
Africa [pp. 32-35+70-74]From... by... and for... Ralph C.
Altman [pp. 36-39+78-79]Ralph C. Altman, 1909-1967 [p.
39]Professionals and Amateurs: The Musicians of Zaria and
Obimo [pp. 40-45+80+82-84]PoemsDeath of the Mahogany [p.
46]The Old Sea Chain [pp. 46-47]L'imagerie Rituelle en
Afrique Noire [pp. 48-53+86-87]Les Masques Africains [pp. 54-
56+58-60]The Literature of Cape Verde [pp. 62-64]Letter from
Nairobi [pp. 66-69]Back Matter
Terracotta Statuettes from Mali
Author(s): Roderick J. McIntosh and Susan Keech McIntosh
Source: African Arts, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Feb., 1979), pp. 51-53+91
Published by: UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3335485
Accessed: 28-01-2020 03:38 UTC
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Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the
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https://about.jstor.org/terms
UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center is
collaborating with JSTOR to digitize,
preserve and extend access to African Arts
This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Tue, 28 Jan 2020
03:38:22 UTC
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Terracotta Statuettes from Mali
'',a I' a :~ I : k! g ......
The first discovery of terracotta stat-
uary from the Inland Delta of Mali
was reported over thirty-five years ago
(Vieillard 1940). Fully fifteen statuettes in
related styles have subsequently been
described in print, all the result of chance
surface discoveries in the region stretch-
ing from Jenne' to Mopti, and at least
one hundred more are housed in Euro-
pean museums or private collections.
The importance of this group of terracot-
tas lies in the fact that they constitute one
of several major West African terracotta
traditions, including Nok, Ife and Sao,
which have been revealed primarily
through archaeological pursuits (legiti-
mate or otherwise!). Unfortunately, little
could be said, until recently, of the tem-
poral placement or cultural context of the
Inland Delta figures. In reviewing an
exhibition at which several of these ter-
racottas were displayed, Labelle Prussin
summed up the problem for the readers
of African Arts several years ago: "There
is . . . presently no basis on which to
establish any datings or provenance for
these so-called Djenne and Mopti terra
cottas .... Only a controlled archeolog-
ical investigation in the area may ulti-
mately reveal the nature and extent of terra
cotta art history in the area" (Prussin
1973:67). Such an archaeological project
was recently undertaken in the Inland
Niger Delta. In the course of it, a
statuette was recovered from a secure
archaeological context for which a
radiocarbon determination was sub-
sequently obtained (Fig. 4).
The excavations were carried out from
February to May, 1977, at the large
mound of Jenne-jeno, which rises above
the flood plain three kilometers south-
east of the present city of Jenne. Justly
famed for her pre-eminent position as a
trading entrep6t in the Middle Ages,
Jenne was intimately linked with Tim-
buktu in the commercial networks that
extended from the Akan forest region
across the Sahara Desert to North Africa.
Oral tradition claims Jennd-jeno (literally
"ancient Jenn&" in Songhai) to be the
ancestral site of the present town. The
archaeological richness of this vast site is
attested to by the thick scattering of sur-
face remains that blanket the 900-meter
length of Jenne-jeno. Hundreds of
mud-brick house foundations and
funerary urns have been exposed by ero-
sion, and segments of the city wall can be
traced at many points on the periphery
of the mound. Several 3 x 3 meter pits
were excavated, revealing 5 meters of
unbroken Iron Age deposits. Early
radiocarbon results indicate that the
mound of Jenne-jeno was built up dur-
ing the course of more than a millenium
of continuous human occupation, and
that abandonment of the site was in
progress by A.D. 1500. These dates im-
mediately imply that the urban dwellers
of Jenne-jeno witnessed, and possibly
contributed to, the rise of the great Em-
pire of Mali. Unlike the early forest civili-
zations of Ife and Benin, little is known of
the art produced by the succession of
Sudanic empires that held sway over the
Inland Niger Delta from the eighth to the
sixteenth century. For this reason, the
recovery of a terracotta statuette from
our final excavation unit constituted an
important art historical as well as ar-
chaeological discovery.
This final pit was sunk in a relatively
high section of the mound, in what ap-
peared to be a residential quarter. Sur-
face features in the area excavated in-
cluded the intersecting foundations of a
round and a square house (Fig. 1), and a
large, spherical painted pot, which was
unusual for the region. Excavation was
made difficult by the fact that both house
foundations were made of djennifre, the
mud bricks shaped into truncated cones
that were considered the trademark of
masons from Jenne. Surface erosion had
caused all bricks, those in walls as well as
those collapsed to the side, to merge in a
confused mass. Only patient excavation
and exposure of each individual brick
allowed us to trace the foundations.
It was at the eastern edge of the round
T il ll,? i 1
_A4,%**?"
4?1-:
A4-~?~~ga~~
MW" .,T :7.
Ak,:
1. STATUETTE AND ASSOCIATED POTTERY
IMMEDIATELY UPON EXPOSURE.
51
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house that the terracotta statuette was
found, its base resting 0.875 meter below
the surface. Physically, the statuette was
in only fair condition; the base had bro-
ken and partially crumbled prior to ex-
posure, probably due to the extremely
coarse fabric of the terracotta and poor
firing. Stylistically, the statuette showed
strong affinities to the wide-eyed, prog-
nathic style that is well known from the
Inland Niger Delta. The figure is in a
kneeling posture with the legs forming
part of the rectangular base. The limbs
on several of the other statuettes from
the area are represented in a similar
two-dimensional style that was achieved
by incising the outlines of legs into the
modeled clay base (Malzy 1967:18; Monod
1943:11; Haselberger 1966:144). Some
kind of covering from the waist to just
above the knees is suggested by a series
of incised parallel lines. The arms are
crossed over the chest with hands rest-
ing on the shoulders, a statuette posture
reported by Szumowski (1955:67). A
large torque hangs about the neck, and a
number of deep incisions at the wrist and
lower arm undoubtedly represent
bracelets. The head is markedly prog-
nathous and flattened along the axis of
the chin. Bulging "cowrie shell" eyes are
found on the majority of the published
statuettes, although they are often more
exaggerated than those of the Jenn&-jeno
find. The terracotta was slipped a deep
reddish-brown.
The curious spherical pot, mentioned
earlier, which was found within both the
round and rectilinear foundations, had
lain immediately above the statuette. A
number of other ceramic objects were
found in direct association with the
statuette. To the immediate south and
west of the terracotta were a round object
with multiple serpent motifs in relief, a
deep, narrow pot with horizontal flanges
(similar pots are today used as water
beakers), a ceramic mortar and pestle
with traces of a red substance (ochre?),
and a large carinated bowl containing
carbonized rice (Oryza glaberrima) and
purslane (Portulaca oleracea). Several ob-
jects resembling these have been re-
ported in association with terracotta
statuettes at other sites in the Inland
Delta (Masson-Detourbet 1953:100-102).
At the same depth as the base of the
statuette and within the fill of the round
house, we collected a large sample of
charcoal. Radiocarbon dating of this
sample has given a result of A.D. 1150+
140 (Lab # RL 806: 830+ 140 B.P.), which
must be statistically interpreted as mean-
ing that there is a 66% probability that
the actual date of the charcoal falls be-
tween A.D. 1010 and A.D. 1290. The
statuette, therefore, was probably placed
in the position in which we found it
sometime between A.D. 1000-1300.
As far as we are able to tell, the
statuette was not placed in a pit and
buried. Rather, it appears that all the
ceramic pieces were placed together in a
round structure, the walls of which were
then deliberately collapsed so that what
remained was a pile of mud-brick rubble
about a meter high. The square wall and
unusual spherical pot may have
functioned to mark the site, but it is en-
tirely possible that their close spatial rela-
tionship to the statuette is purely coinci-
dental.
It may be that the statuette and as-
sociated pottery were deposited in the
course of a ritual directed toward ances-
tor worship. Ancestral cults continued to
flourish in Jenne as late as 1910, when
Monteil recorded their existence. At that
time, a small ancestral "altar" could be
found in the entryway of many Jenne
houses, consisting of a platform on
which was placed a human representa-
tion of the revered ancestor. Sacrifices
were made to the deceased through the
medium of the statuette (Monteil
1971:136-137). The use of human
figurines in ancestral cults is historically
and ethnographically documented over
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InstructionsImagine that you are the Director of Health Informat.docx

  • 1. Instructions Imagine that you are the Director of Health Information for a large hospital. As Director, you sit on various institution-wide committees which govern the organization’s policies. You have seen issues arise that cause you to propose changes in policies, procedures and operations across the hospital. Therefore, you have decided to create a proposal to the CEO and Board of Directors, which you will develop in collaboration with committee teams. Please follow the instructions below in completion of this assignment. Welcome to the first day of our virtual zoom classroom 31 March 2020 Ancient Mali: Archaeology and the Inland Niger Delta Terracottas Aerial photo of the town of Jenne during the rainy season Satellite photo of the Inland Niger Delta Sources of Information for reconstructing the history of this region:
  • 2. • Arabic and European Accounts: very limited before the 19th century • Oral traditions passed down from generation to generation. These provide some context and flavor with kernels of truth woven in. Local oral traditions in Jenne identified Jenne-jeno as the ancestral home of its peoples • Terracotta sculptures that began appearing on the art market as early as the 1970s, but little information about their use or function (without archaeology) • Archaeological Investigations: Excavations by the McIntoshes in 1977 and 1981 at the site of Jenne-jeno and neighboring site of Hambarketolo (remember the map quiz?) INLAND NIGER DELTA Jenne-jeno 250 BC - 1400 AD Mali archaeological site 12-17th century AD Mali
  • 3. terracotta sculptures thermoluminescence carbon 14 stratigraphy terracotta Roderick and Susan McIntosh Wagadu The Inland Niger Delta is the name given to the region in central Mali where the great Niger river floods annually, making it an agriculturally rich region in the midst of the Sahel. Just outside the present- day city of Jenne lies the archaeological site of Jenne-jeno, which was a multi-ethnic urban center well before the arrival of Islam and trade across the Sahara, inhabited by 250 BC. Aerial photo of the site of Jenne-jeno during the rainy season (doesn’t look like much, right?) on surface: ceramic pottery fragments and funerary urns, evidence of house foundations, and evidence of a city wall
  • 4. Aerial photo of the present day town of Jenne with Jenne-jeno in the background Methods of dating (None of them super accurate, need corroboration) 1) stratigraphy, essentially a sequence of layers that provide a relative chronology (see below) 2) radio-carbon dating of organic materials, especially wood and charcoal based on rate of decay +/- years 3) thermoluminescence (google it) the minerals in clay store energy, and when clay is fired, the firing “cleans” the slate and the process of storing energy renews, thus possible to approximate the date an object was fired within a range of (hundreds) of years. Phase I: 250 BC-300 CE circular house of bent poles and reed mats suggests possible seasonal habitation with semi-nomadic people (herders and fishermen?) returning to the site every year. Example of a temporary nomadic structure set up on the edge of Timbuktu that is similar to what the earliest Jenne- jeno houses may have looked like
  • 5. Phase II: 300 - 800 CE included evidence of stacked mud circular house foundations, indicates that people lived here year-round Note: The McIntoshes second excavation in 1981 was funded in part by National Geographic. They sent a couple of photographers to see what the McIntoshes were doing, but the archaeological site was pretty boring, so they brought this family out from Jenne to “stage” the early house. The problem is that lighting these fires in the excavation pit destroyed the scientific value of this site, because the fires would compromise any carbon-14 or thermoluminescence testing. Phase II: 300 - 800 CE Massive city wall constructed from sun-dried mud bricks, had to have been a major public works project. People probably needed protection from flooding, not conflict from outside Phase II burial urns: Large ceramic
  • 6. pots in which they buried their dead In 2011, I visited the archaeologist Mamadou Cisse (remember him from Caravans of Gold?) when he was excavating a site just outside the town of Jenne on the opposite side from of Jenne-jeno. They discovered this intact funerary urn. We were there to see them pull it from the ground. See video posted on BlackBoard. Phase III: 800-1000 AD This time period was the height of occupation at the site with as many as 20,000 inhabitants, with both round and rectangular houses, and a blacksmith workshop active during this time period. After 1000, the city declined and was abandoned completely by 1400, when the present day town of Jenne began to be occupied. Another National Geographic photo: They
  • 7. decided to pay the herders to run a herd of cattle up the hill and across the site so that they would have a more interesting photo! Phase I 250 BC-300 CE imported stone beads pottery sherds iron and iron slags earliest domesticated rice fired clay figurines: possibly toys Phase II 300 -800 CE more to lives than just subsistence, evidence of social stratification and diversity iron working at the site copper ornaments (copper from the Sahara) gold earring (gold from southern gold mines) fancy footed bowls and decorative pottery Phase III 800 - 1000 CE even more variety of goods, possibly as many as 20,000 inhabitants = URBAN center with satellite communities (Hambarketolo) glass bead necklace from North Africa terra cotta statuettes
  • 8. Phase I: more than 100,000 pottery sherds similar to pottery from the Sahara several centuries earlier, suggests that the first inhabitants came from the north The crew stayed in the town of Jenne (The Great Mosque is in the background). They went to excavate early in the morning, and in the afternoons they sorted and washed pottery. The black bit in the middle is iron slag, the refuse from smelting iron ore: evidence of iron working at the site, not just imported objects, but no know local sources of iron ore, so means trade contacts and specialized craftsmanship. Reclining figure excavated in 1981 along with a head that does not match the body, note amulets, lots of
  • 9. jewelry and a knife strapped to the arm Phase IV: 1000-1400 CE gradual decline in population, abandoned by 1400 CE The terracotta statues and fragments the McIntoshes excavated were all from this last phase. The “Jenne terracottas” represent a significant early sculptural tradition, but here's the problem: More than a thousand of these terracottas are in museums and private collections in Europe and the US, but only a few of them (maybe 10!) came from proper legal excavations. With the exception of the reclining figure, the pieces found by the McIntoshes are not fabulous works of art, but they are important because their excavations provide the only information we have about the use or function or context of these terracottas. The vast majority of these sculptures in museum and private collections were probably plundered or looted from archaeological sites by local people hoping to earn a few bucks when they sell it to a middleman. They are smuggled out and
  • 10. sold privately for a lot more money. This piece sold in 2019 for more than $400,000. It had been in a European collection since the 1960s, and thus before there were laws in place that specifically protected this tradition. It is suggested that this piece may represent Sogolan, the mother of the so-called Lion King Sundiata, founder of the empire of Mali according to oral traditions. https://www.sothebys.com/ en/auctions/ecatalogue/2019/ coll-riviere-pf1928/lot. 51.html Looters know to dig where one can see house foundations on the surface
  • 11. 8 statues/fragments excavated by the McIntoshes found in four different contexts: 1) figure with head and crossed arms placed in round structure with several ceramic pots and a round object with snakes deliberately collapsed 2) two headless figures (below, male and female) found eroding out of the surface next to a house foundation under the floor 3) male / female pair, with figure fragments in a niche in a house wall occupied by iron workers associated with sandstone mortars, iron rods, pots with snakes perhaps a rain making altar 4) reclining headless figure with head found in a refuse pit Possible functions: 1) as representations of ancestors that might have been placed on altars within the home. Most depict human forms (male and female pairs, mother and child, etc.) And some seem to be in positions of prayer. So, maybe this is a reasonable explanation. But there are others that represent bizarre diseased figures and some animal forms, so these ones don’t fit this explanation.
  • 12. 2) as spiritual offerings, such as the one places inside a structure that was intentionally collapsed, or the male and female pair found embedded in the mud wall of a house. In fact, there is an oral tradition collected from old men in Jenne concerning offerings of statuettes and grain as symbolic re-enactment of legend of Tampama, a young virgin said to have been buried alive in the walls of Jenne to insure that the city walls would stand against the floods. 3) Other … as you will see in the following slides, there are other subjects for which there is no archaeological explanation, just speculation. Some male and female pairs, figures in positions of prayer or mourning. Metropolitan Museum of Art Seated Figure 13th century Jenne peoples This haunting figure huddles with its leg hugged to its chest and its head dropped on its knee. It
  • 13. simultaneously suggests the knotted tension of anxiety and the sublime absorption of deep prayer. Created over 700 years ago, in the Inland Niger Delta region of present-day Mali, this elegant work's intense emotional immediacy blurs the boundaries of time and place. This terracotta sculpture comes from a site called Jenne-jeno, the oldest known city in sub-Saharan Africa. Jenne-jeno flourished in the ninth century A.D., but declined and was abandoned by 1400. Items of cast brass and forged iron, clay vessels, and figures like this one survive. They testify to what scholars contend was a richly varied and highly sophisticated urban society. A few controlled archaeological digs provide only the vaguest outlines of the original significance of the art of this time and region. Recovered terracotta figures are frequently quite detailed. They include jewelry, clothing, and body ornaments such as the parallel columns of bumps and circles on the back of this work. Sometimes they cover the entire body and seem to represent the pustules of some dreadful illness. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/314362 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Jenne%2 0peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize= 0 Another type of figure are these equestrian warriors, however none of these have been found archaeologically, so we don’t know if they were displayed in groups, or represented individual ancestors. We do know that the
  • 14. Empire of Mali boasted a large and effective cavalry. Motherhood theme: Childbirth and (happy) mother and child, but then we have an emaciated pregnant woman (disturbing, no?) and even more disturbing: A woman giving birth to a snake (lovely) with snakes coming out of her ears (yikes). Lots of snakes … Possible a reference to oral traditions about the Great Snake of Wagadu (the local Soninke name for what we call the Empire of Ghana). The legend is that the Great Snake provided the empire with gold in return for the sacrifice of a beautiful virgin every year. But one year the lover of the young woman selected took a sword and beheaded the snake, and the head rolled south and did not stop until it reached the edge
  • 15. of the forests (where the gold is still being mined today). Ghana entered a seven year period of drought and famine, its gold reserves were depleted, and the empire fell. I could give you a creative writing assignment about these two pieces. What is going on here? The large female figure has two wiggling “children” on her lap, but one of them has a beard, and they seem to be pinching her ear with a pair of blacksmith tongs … yikes. The group below includes what appears to be a man with a knife sneaking around a large buffalo/cow with the intent to attack a man minding his own business and drinking some tea (?) Finally, this piece represents
  • 16. what appears to be a shrine with two serpents coiled around the outside and a human arm reaching up the side of the doorway. A CT scan revealed that the human figure was a headless pregnant woman (!!!) and that the shrine contained contained a bunch of what seems to be other headless women ... virtual human sacrifice? female seclusion for other ritual purposes? The Great Snake of Wagadu? https://noma.org/ct-scans-reveal-mysterious- figures-in-malian-terracotta/ https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/ terracotta-statues/djenne-shrine/ https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/terracotta-statues/djenne- shrine/ https://www.scantix.com/case-studies/terracotta-statues/djenne- shrine/ Timbuktu Mali
  • 17. Jenne (Djenne) Mali Bobo-Dioulasso Burkina Faso Kong Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast) Kawara Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast) Larabanga Ghana adobe (banco) mud brick architecture ARCHITECTURE OF ISLAM 14th century CE to present Labelle Prussin Practicing Architect and Architectural Historian (later went for a PhD) Problems at the time (1968) when she wrote the article: 1) lack of research, or research too focused on a particular area, not enough research across the broad region 2) Lack of permanent
  • 18. structures to study, mostly mud-brick architecture, not much stone (remember that at Koumbi Saleh, the stone mosque survived, but the kings palace did not) 3) Lack of respect for African architecture generally not seen as Architecture (with capitol A) but rather as building technology Note: So, the exhibition at the Met is called “Sahel: Art and Empires of the Shores of the Sahara”. We are now moving south into the region known as the Sudan. The term Sudan refers to the region Arabs called the land of the Blacks (Bilad-al-Sudan). Remember our discussion of the trans-Saharan trade? Camel caravans made their way across the desert in search of gold among other things. The success of that trade depended on the fact that there was already a thriving trade network across the Sudanic region, connecting the (Guinean) forest zones with the Sahel. The Berbers and Arabs brought the Islamic faith with them, and it spread along trade routes throughout this region. The traders were among the first to adopt Islam and trade and Islamic learning went hand in hand throughout this region. As more people adopted Islam, there was a need for mosques to accommodate the faithful. So who do you think built these mosques?
  • 19. What do you notice about the distribution of Sudanese mud mosques in West Africa? Timbuktu Jenne BoboDioulasso Kong Kawara Larabanga Prussin identifies 5 distinct types of Sudanese-style mosques that correspond to five phases of spread of this distinctive architectural style in West Africa (read the article by Prussin!). Timbuktu, M Kawara, Cote d’IvoireKong, Cote d’Ivoire Jenne, Mali Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso Djinguereber Mosque, Timbuktu, Mali probably built in the 14th century,
  • 20. possibly following Mansa Musa’s return to Mali after his pilgrimage to Mecca. There is a tradition that he brought an architect with him https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali- timbuktu-djingareyber- mosque.html#header5-a9 Check out this website with 3-D modeling of the mosque (also posted on Blackboard) Very cool. The only weird part is that the model has no people and the mosque seems to be out in the middle of nowhere. https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber- mosque.html#header5-a9 https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber- mosque.html#header5-a9 https://www.zamaniproject.org/site-mali-timbuktu-djingareyber- mosque.html#header5-a9 Sankore Mosque, Timbuktu, Mali Above: photograph taken in the early 20th century. The caption says the mosque was constructed in the 11th century, but it was probably constructed in the 14th century, around the same time as the
  • 21. Djingereber mosque. Right: a photograph I took in the middle of the day when it was well over 100 degrees. The streets were deserted except this young woman and the goat. But when we returned to the city at 6 pm, the streets and shops were packed. Noon was a great time for pictures, but not for shopping. Aerial photograph of a town along the Niger river during the dry season. The dark spot in the center of the town is the mosque, designed to resemble the Great Mosque of Jenne, but smaller. The open space near the mosque is the market place. You find the mosque, you find the market, you find the market, you find the mosque. Trade and Islam went hand in hand. The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali on market day Market day in Jenne, Mali
  • 22. The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali (1980s) on market day The Great Mosque of Jenne, Mali (1980’s) the open place is deserted except for this horseman named Chokari. I had just interviewed him and returned back to where I was staying for lunch when I saw him riding across the square. Jenne, Mali https://www.zamaniproject.org/site- mali-djenne-great- mosque.html#header5-an The Great mosque, Jenne, Mali Massive pillars and arches on the interior. Air and light vents on the roof with ceramic caps. The main mosque, Bobo Dioulasso
  • 23. Burkina Faso Kong, Cote d’Ivoire Kong, Cote d’Ivoire Kawara, Cote d’Ivoire Larabanga, Ghana probably dates from the 17th century (Wikipedia says 1421) conserved in 2002 with help from the World Monuments Fund, but hard to maintain in this climate. 2011 2002 Sorobango, Cote d’Ivoire Small Sudanese style mosque in a village in
  • 24. southern Mali. It has been years since it was re-plastered, because they built a new mosque next to it out of cement. An even smaller village mosque that is made of cement, but still has that unmistakable Sudanese style Traditional Sudanese-style mud brick architecture, Jenne, Mali French colonial architecture Sudanese style in cement, Dakar, Senegal Train Station in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso Community center built in 1930 in the town of Frejus, France (the French Riviera). It was built for West African troops stationed in France during the Colonial period, and still owned by the Ministry of
  • 25. Defense Main market building built by the French in the center of Bamako View of one of the main banks in the capitol of Bamako Mosques built today are usually of cement and follow a style more familiar from Saudi Arabia BAMANA Mali AD 1300 - present Ciwara (Chiwara) nyama=ritual power, the force that animates all life, embodied in all living things but also present in inanimate materials (earth, clay, stone, iron) nyamakalaw=those who handle nyama, especially blacksmith-sculptors boli=ritual object or altar Stephen Wooten
  • 26. Nyamakala: The Bamana recognize three groups of artists who handle and transform nyama: 1) Griots (male and female oral artists, musicians, traditional historians) speech is considered to have nyama, it is powerful and potentially dangerous. 2) Leatherworkers, who transform the skins of animals into leather 3) Blacksmith-sculptors who transform iron ore into iron, and who transform wood into beautiful sculptures, and whose wives are potters, transforming clay into pottery, all by means of fire Bamana sculpture of an exceptionally powerful woman with child. Note the headdress that represents the kind of protective hat worn by hunters and warriors, covered with powerful amulets, medicinal packets stuffed into horns and the knife strapped to the upper arm, like the reclining terracottas figure from Jenne-jeno Bamana figures on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art carved by blacksmiths Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • 27. Mother and Child 15th–20th century Bamana peoples Bamana notions of ideal beauty and character are evoked in this figure of a mother and child. The figure is part of a corpus of large, relatively naturalistic sculptures whose rounded volumes and variety of gestures depart from the angular forms and stiff postures characteristic of many other types of Bamana sculpture. These figures are displayed at the annual ceremonies of "Jo", an association of initiated Bamana men and women, and at the rituals of "Gwan", a related society whose purpose is to help women conceive and bear children. Groups of sculptures which were collectively owned by individual communities to be publicly exhibited on such occasions, included representations of a mother and child, a male companion, and related attendant figures. This figure depicts a woman of extraordinary abilities, as shown by the amulet-laden hat she wears and the knife strapped to her left arm, both of which are conventionally associated with the powers of male hunters. An even more vital message conveyed by the sculpture is the importance of motherhood in maintaining social cohesion and continuity within Bamana society, and elders' roles in passing on their skills, powers, and values to future generations. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/ collection/search/312336? searchField=All&sortBy=Rel evance&where=Africa%7cM
  • 28. ali&ft=Gwan&offset=0& amp;rpp=20&pos=6 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Bamana %20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSi ze=0 The term Ciwara (pronounced Chi-wara) refers to: 1) the mythical beast that taught the Bamana to farm. 2) to the society that celebrates farming (see Wooten article) 3) and to the antelope sculptures, wooden headdresses that usually appear in pairs What does Steven Wooten say about these images? Wooten describes a series of events he witnessed while doing research on agricultural practices among the Bamana, including several ciwara performances This photograph was taken by a friend of mine who witnessed a ciwara wonder-working
  • 29. performance that included this man putting his hand into the fire, grabbing a burning stick, without getting burned (do not try this at home!) There are three distinct styles of Ciwara headdresses: vertical, composite and horizontal. All include elements of antelopes, some anteaters, and abstract elements that are not found in nature. Remember, these represent a mythical beast. Pangolin eland antelope bull sable antelope Aardvark vertical style Ciwara Verticle style ciwara The male figures are the most elaborate with a lot of creativity in
  • 30. the abstract patterns of the mane vertical style Ciwara this vertical style Ciwara sold at auction in 2012 for $130,000 Photograph taken before 1910 of a Banana ciwara performance Composite style (often combining antelope with anteater/aardvark/pangolin) Ciwara horizontal style ciwara headdresses This one has the tail of a chameleon boli (ritual altar) mixed media (don’t ask!, okay, see the next slide with a bolt and the description from the Met Museum) Most boli are small, can be held in the hand and
  • 31. danced with, but check this one out. Met Museum Power Object (Boli) 19th–first half of 20th century Bamana peoples A rough, cracked surface obscures exact identification of the organic and inorganic materials assembled to create the boli (pl.: boliw), or power object, shown here. Such objects play an essential role within Bamana spiritual life. Boliw have attracted much attention from Western observers due to their amorphous forms and unusual materials. The bulbous and amorphous shape is rather idiosyncratic within the repertoire of Bamana art. Boliw are composed of a wooden armature "core" wrapped in white cotton cloth, around which clay and sacrificial materials are encrusted. This boli has four short "legs" upon which it sits, as well as a single hump rising from the top. The creature that a boli represents is unidentifiable, but many take on the loose zoomorphic form suggested by this work, while others may be anthropomorphic. The primary function of a boli is to accumulate and control the naturally occurring life force called nyama for the spiritual benefit of the community. The composition of the encrusted patina varies, but all the ingredients possess this inherent and important spiritual energy. The encrustation may include the blood of
  • 32. chickens or goats, chewed and expectorated kola nuts, alcoholic beverages, honey, metal, animal bones, vegetable matter, and sometimes millet. Sometimes this added matter is so extensive that it obscures the original wooden form and takes on a shape all its own. As the encrustation cracks and hardens throughout the years, it gives the impression that these ingredients are tightly packed within the boli. As the sacrificial materials accumulate over time, each added layer affords the structure greater spiritual power. Boliw and their numerous ingredients have been interpreted in a number of different ways. It has been suggested that the disparate elements of which boliw are composed symbolize the various parts of the universe, so that the whole can be read as a model of Bamana cosmological belief. Such power objects are owned by male associations whose members progress through induction processes that span decades. Over time, they attain an esoteric knowledge of the natural and spiritual world. Opaque and mysterious to the uninitiated eye, boliw are safely handled only by those association members equipped with the most rarified expertise and knowledge. https:// www.metmuseum.or g/art/collection/ search/312389
  • 33. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Bamana %20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSi ze=0 former West African Airline Hotel in Bamako Former Malian airline with ciwara logo West African Research Association (WARA) Because of the graphic clarity and elegance of the Bamana chiwara sculptural design, the headdress has inspired countless commercial logos African restaurant in Palermo, Sicily, Italy Ciwara as the name of an award given by the Malian state ciwara wax cloth design Chiwara as the name for a nonprofit organization in Michigan that provides training and workshops
  • 34. around issues of sustainability. The website is no longer active (maybe the organization disbanded) but I am curious as to where the founder got his idea to use Ciwara as the inspiration for the organization and for their design logo. Maybe he took an African art class and learned about Ciwara there??? This is a film still from the Avengers: Infinity War (2018) when Shuri heals Vision. While most of the objects in Shuri’s high tech lab are shiny and new, here (out of focus) you can see the unmistakeable outlines of a vertical ciwara on a pedestal in the back ground. Can anyone get me a better shot of this? Lorenzo Pace, Triumph of the Human Spirit, 2000, black granite, Foley Square, Manhattan In the mid-1990s I got a phone call from artist Lorenzo Pace. He was submitting a design for a public art commission for the African Burial Ground project. He knew that I had worked in Mali with Bamana artists and
  • 35. he wanted to ask me about the ciwara tradition. He told me his idea was to base the massive sculpture on a female ciwara headdress, and he was concerned that his design would not offend Bamana sensibilities. When he told me it would be a 20-30 foot high stone, my first thought was to say that a Banana farmer would not recognize it. What do you think? https://www.nycgovparks.org/ parks/thomas-paine-park/ highlights/19692http://lorenzopace.com/triumph-of-the-human- spirit/ Antelope Headdresses and Champion Farmers: Negotiating Meaning and Identity through the Bamana Ciwara Complex Stephen R. Wooten African Arts, Vol. 33, No. 2. (Summer, 2000), pp. 18-33+89-90.
  • 36. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001- 9933%28200022%2933%3A2%3C18%3AAHACFN%3E2.0.CO %3B2-3 African Arts is currently published by UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/journals/jscasc.html. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to and preserving a digital archive of scholarly journals. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact [email protected] http://www.jstor.org Wed Jan 17 00:29:12 2007 http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001- 9933%28200022%2933%3A2%3C18%3AAHACFN%3E2.0.CO
  • 38. Pullo (Fulani) man However, there is historical significance to the Dogon including the Fulani as characters in their masquerade. Pullo (or Peul or Fulani) refers to an ethnic group that is found throughout Mali and in fact across much of the Sahel/Savannah region of West Africa. In the past they were herders who moved with their cattle seasonally in search of pastures for grazing. There is often a symbiotic relationship between the Fulani and different farming groups, they need each other, but there is also tension when times are hard. The current political crisis in Mali has inflamed tensions between the Dogon and their Fulani neighbors. Dieterlen identifies the “real name” of the masquerade character known as Pullo as dyobi, or as the runner. She says it represents the rebellious Ogo before his transformation into the fox. According to Dieterlen (seen here on the right), Ogo lost the ability to speak when he was transformed into
  • 39. a fox, but he is able to communicate through sand divination. The diviner clears an area, creates a grid in the sand, and marks it with sticks and pebbles. And he leave a bit of bait to attract the fox (a descendant of Ogo) who comes at night and disturbs the pattern in ways that can be read by the diviner the next morning. Sand divination (foot prints of the fox/Ogo) Pullo (Fulani) women Fulani women are known for their elaborate hairstyles and their beauty, so it is not a surprise that the Dogon would incorporate them into their masquerade tradition. They are part of the Dogon world, selling milk from their cattle in local markets. Male Dogon dancers wear bead, fiber, and cowrie shell headdresses that emulate the traditional crested hairstyle, and they wear pointy fake breasts, and they dance on stilts. This is a page from Griaule’s first book that presents his documentation of the walu mask: its name in the Dogon language, a description of what it looks like, the fact that he holds a stick that he paws the ground with plant grain.
  • 40. He is afraid of children who provoke him. Griaule provides the song that is sung, and the origin myth: about an antelope that killed some of the sheep and goats belonging to the villagers, and so they dug a hole and trapped it. Walu antelope mask Walu antelope mask: Dieterlen tells us that the walu antelope is a character from the time of Amma’s creation of the Earth, but Griaule’s documentation there is also an origin story about a hunter who killed the antelope and created the mask to honor the spirit of the antelope. The question is, was the character introduced to the masquerade because of what happened to the hunter and then identified with the Amma creation myth? A walu antelope and rabbit masquerade he photographed by Paul Lane performing during a dama funeral performance. Satimbe/Yasigi (mask with a female character on top) said to represent the first woman who
  • 41. tried on the red fibers before the young Dogon men took them from her. She became the “sister” of the masquerade, who honors the women who provide millet beer during a funeral. Dieterlen says she represents the female twin of Ogo known as Yasigi, who was just as much or a trouble maker as Ogo/Fox. Rabbit (Hare) Griaule documented some 65 different types of mask characters including various animals, birds, and both Dogon and non-Dogon characters or personages Monkey Paul Lane is an archaeologist who went to Dogon country to do ethnographic research on the household goods and other kinds of material culture. Below on the left are ground floor plans of specific houses Lane chose to document because they help archaeologists understand what they find
  • 42. when the excavate. On the right is a page from Griaule’s first book when he was documenting traditional Dogon culture, before he became “obsessed” with cosmology. Photo taken by Griaule in the 1930s. He says that women rush to leave the open plaza because the masqueraders are about to arrive. While the women may avoid direct contact with the masquerade, they often watch from their rooftops and are certainly aware of what is going on. Photo taken by LIFE photographer Eliot Elisofon in 1959 of a funeral ceremony. The women stand back as men honor the deceased by firing their guns. The ceremony is to guide the soul of the deceased to the afterlife. The photograph (on the left) depicts men firing blank charges during mock battles intended to guide the spirit of the deceased onto the path to the afterlife. "The Dogon believe that after death, the spirit of the deceased is not immediately transformed into an ancestor. It is when in this state that a person's
  • 43. spirit can be most malevolent and dangerous. Funerals, bago bundo, which are held several weeks, and sometimes months, after burial, are public rites at which agnatic and affinal kin venerate the life and actions of the deceased." [Lane P., 1988: Settlement as History: A Study of Space and Time among the Dogon of Mali. University of Cambridge.]. During his trip to Mali, Elisofon visited the Dogon people in Sanga (Sangha), a group of thirteen villages lying east of Bandiagara at the top of an escarpment. The photograph depicts men firing blank charges during mock battles intended to guide the spirit of the deceased onto the path to the afterlife. This photograph was taken when Eliot Elisofon was on assignment for Life magazine and traveled to Africa from August 18, 1959 to December 20, 1959. Lane recorded this ceremony with firing of guns at a funeral in 1983. While in Dogon country, Lane witnessed both ritual damas and masked performances done for tourists. Although other scholars have assumed that tourism is harmful to traditional culture, Lane suggests that the Dogon people understand the difference between an elaborate ritual ceremony (the dama) performed for a deceased elder and short performances of the masks that are done for tourists. He suggests that the two can and do co- exist.
  • 44. Dutch anthropologist Walter van Beek who was memorialized in a new mask type representing the white anthropologist In the film (African Art video below) the narrator talks to Samuel Sidibe who says that tourism has affected the kinds of masks that perform even in ritual contexts — cultural selection by tourism — because tourists want to see the “traditional” like the kanaga. But she also mentions that the Dogon have incorporated new types into their repertoire, including “the white anthropologist.” Dogon dancers posing for a group photo for tourists, and tourists posing with masked dancers. A sampling of Dogon masquerade dancers. Dieterlen says that the only mask types that matter are the ones that can be identified with Dogon cosmology (the myths of origin described by Ogotemmeli). She says the “new” types are temporary (and thus
  • 45. not significant). But others would argue that Dogon mask characters emerge out of historical events and situations (like white anthropologists coming to study them), and that as part of the living culture of the Dogon, it is inevitable that the characters will change and that ritual beliefs with change. In 2003 Mali was represented at the Smithsonian Institutions’ Folklife Festival that usually happens every summer on the Mall in DC. There were artists, musicians, and dance performances, including this Dogon dancer, here casually strolling among the tourists. They even brought masons from Jenne to built a gateway in traditional style in the middle of the Mall. https://festival.si.edu/past-program/2003/mali-from- timbuktu-to-washington DOGON Mali 15th -21st century AD front speech
  • 46. clear speech Amma Nommo Ogo (fox/jackal) Dama ceremony kanaga mask sirige mask pullo walu antelope mask satimbe mask Marcel Griaule Ogotemmeli Germaine Dieterlen Paul Lane falaise=cliffs “Dogon country” or “Pays Dogon” east of the Inland Niger Delta is a very different environment. Instead of rich flat farm land where rice fields benefit with regular flooding, the Bandiagara Cliffs that stretch between the towns of Bandiagara and
  • 47. Douentza are steep and dry. Around the time of the Empire of Ghana (11th-12th century) this region was occupied by people archaeologists called Tellem. They buried their dead in caves in the cliffs. They had a basket and pulley system to lift the corpse and other funerary offerings up to the caves. The Dogon arrived in this region around the 15th century CE. They sought refuge here from wars and the slave-raiding cavalry of the Empire of Mali and subsequent powerful states in the region. They built their homes up against the cliffs and farmed out on the plains below. What you see here are stone and mud masonry granaries (storage bins for grain) safely tucked away up in the cliffs,
  • 48. not easy to get to. This is a page from Griaule’s first book (Masques Dogon) about Dogon masquerade. Here he was documenting the movements of the dancers on the 4th and 5th days of the sigui festival. In the 1930s, the French anthropologist Marcel Griaule went to Dogon country to do research on masquerade traditions and beliefs. At first he spent time simply documenting what he saw, identifying the different characters represented by the masks, recording the songs, recording the dance steps, and the symbolism of the masks. As Germain Dieterlen says in the article you are supposed to read on Blackboard, the information Griaule provided in that first book (Masques Dogon) was what the Dogon call “front speech,” information given to children and strangers. Dieterlen was a student of Griaule’s, and part of a team of scholars who spent a lot of time
  • 49. studying with the Dogon. Griaule had heard about an elderly blind hunter named Ogotemmeli, who was known as a diviner and knowledgeable elder. In the 1940s he began a series of conversations with Ogotemmeli to expand his understanding of Dogon religious beliefs or cosmology, what Dieterlen calls “clear speech.” This was published in a later book that focuses on cosmology called Conversations with Ogotemmeli (translated from the French) Germaine Dieterlen Cosmology: Dogon Creation Myth There are many variations of this myth (and Dieterlen provides confusing details), but here are some key elements: Creator God Amma brought the world into existence including the Earth from a lump of clay. The first creatures he created was Ogo who was born prematurely. In some versions he is the result of an illicit sexual act between Amma and Earth (rape), or the result of incest between Ogo and the Earth (either way something that broke taboos). Ogo rebelled and was transformed into a fox (or a jackal) and lost the ability to speak. Amma then created four pairs of twins known as Nommo, one of which was sacrificed when they were sent to
  • 50. populate Earth. The surviving twins are said to be the mythical ancestors of the present-day Dogon people. These stools with pairs of bisexual twins represent the creation myth visually, with the central post representing the arc that Amma created and sent to Earth. Other aspects of the myth include the origin of death among the Dogon — a myth that provides an explanation for the origin of death, the role of masquerade in accompanying the deceased to the afterlife, and ritual roles for men and women. The film we watched in class that is posted on Blackboard as African Art video (watch the part about the Dogon again … about halfway through) addresses concerns that other scholars have had about all of this research, saying that while it may represent the very esoteric beliefs of a small number of elders like Ogotemmeli, all filtered through Griaule’s own beliefs (and possibly leading questions during these conversations), it does not necessarily represent the beliefs of Dogon society at large then or now. The fact is that beliefs are complicated and they are understood differently by individuals within society. There is no one single TRUTH about what “The Dogon” believe then or now. So read both
  • 51. Dieterlen and Paul Lane, watch the films, and pay attention to the kind of information they present. Think about how they got their information, who they asked, and imagine what you might want to ask, if you were able to travel to Dogon country and conduct research yourself. In the film Samuel Sidibe (then Director of the National Museum in Mali) suggests that foreign researchers, especially Griaule and Dieterlen, were obsessed with finding mythic origins, and did not recognize that Dogon culture is a “living” culture, like any other, that beliefs change and evolve over time (and space). Another myth has to do with the origin of death among the Dogon, a myth that also explains something of the importance of the masquerade. Again, there are different versions of this, but in one version, a woman who represents the descendants of Ogo (Andoumboulou) discovered some blood stained red fibers (possibly a reference to menstrual blood or childbirth) and put them on to scare some Dogon men. At first they were frightened (in mythic tradition, men are often petrified of menstrual blood), but then they thought it would be fun to put on these fiber costumes. According to Ogotemmeli, death among the Dogon was originally a
  • 52. transformation from human form to that of a snake, and from speech to silence. In this tradition an elderly Dogon man was in the process of transformation when he saw the young men wearing these red fiber costumes and he was horrified because of the danger. He cried out, something that broke the taboo of transformation into a snake, and he died immediately, and this was the origin of death among the Dogon. In addition, this also explains the importance of the red fibers that are a critical element of Dogon masquerade costume, possible more important that the individual masks. Every generation puts on those red fibers to atone for the sins of those first young men, and this then condemns them to death as well. Great Mask = sigui (sigi) Every 60 years, the Dogon celebrate and remember that first ancestor who died with a special performance known as Sigui (Sigi). The huge mask created for this ceremony represents a snake. The French “discovered” the
  • 53. remains of 9 such masks in these sacred caves where they were stored. Do the math, this would mean that the first one was carved and danced some 540 years earlier, that is, about when the Dogon arrived in the region in the 15th century. There is often some historical truth in oral traditions. This is a photograph of some of these sigui masks “collected” by the French in the 1930s and brought back to Paris where they went into the collections of the Trocadero Musee de l’Homme (Anthropology Museum), now the Musee du Quai Branly A variety of Dogon masks on display in a museum
  • 54. Dogon masqueraders performing for a dama, a funeral ceremony SIRIGE: a tall checkerboard plank mask • Stars in great numbers, infinite galaxies in the universe • Ogo’s journey to Earth • the path of the Nommos’ ark • many-storied family house (reference to many generations) above: a page from Griaule’s Masques Dogons, that shows representations of sirige masks on the walls of painted caves KANAGA: • Movement of Amma’s hand in creating the world • A bird (stork) Compare these drawings of this kanaga dancer to the movements of kanaga
  • 55. dancers in the different films Met Museum Mask (Kanaga) 20th century Dogon peoples One of the most popular types of masks in the Sanga region is the type known as kanaga. Like other Dogon masks, kanaga masks are worn at rituals called dama, whose goal is to transport the souls of deceased family members away from the village and to enhance the prestige of the deceased and his descendants by magnificent masked performances and generous displays of hospitality. In 1935, French anthropologist Marcel Griaule witnessed a dama ritual in which twenty-nine out of a total of seventy-four masks were of the kanaga type. These masks are characterized by a wooden superstructure in the form of a double-barred cross with short vertical elements projecting from the tips of each horizontal bar. This kanaga mask was collected in Mali by Lester Wunderman, complete with its costume elements. When the mask is worn, the back of the dancer's head is covered with a hood of plaited fiber fringe at the bottom edge. The dancer wears a vest made
  • 56. of black strip-woven cloth and red broadcloth strips embroidered with white cowrie-shells; strands of glass and plastic beads dangle from its edges. The kanaga dancer also wears a pair of trousers made of indigo-dyed, strip- woven cotton cloth, over which he ties a long skirt of curly, loosely strung, black- dyed sanseveria fibers and short overskirts of straight red and yellow fibers. For a traditional dama, the preparation and dyeing of the fibers are undertaken with as much secrecy and ritual as the carving of the wooden mask. During the time spent by Griaule among the Dogon studying their complex belief system, he was initially told that the kanaga mask represents a bird with white wings and black forehead, but he later came to see this literal interpretation as characteristic of the first level of knowledge, that of the uninitiated. The deeper meaning of the kanaga mask apparently pertains both to God, the crossbars being his arms and legs, and to the arrangement of the universe, with the upper crossbar representing the sky and the lower one the earth. The disparity between these two interpretations illustrates the gaps in our understanding of Dogon art. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search#!?q=Dogon% 20peoples&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize =0
  • 57. Masks and Mythology among the Dogon Germaine Dieterlen African Arts, Vol. 22, No. 3. (May, 1989), pp. 34-43+87-88. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001- 9933%28198905%2922%3A3%3C34%3AMAMATD%3E2.0.CO %3B2-M African Arts is currently published by UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/journals/jscasc.html. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.
  • 58. JSTOR is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to and preserving a digital archive of scholarly journals. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact [email protected] http://www.jstor.org Tue Jan 16 20:34:11 2007 http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001- 9933%28198905%2922%3A3%3C34%3AMAMATD%3E2.0.CO %3B2-M http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html http://www.jstor.org/journals/jscasc.html
  • 59. The Architecture of Islam in West Africa Author(s): Labelle Prussin Source: African Arts, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Winter, 1968), pp. 32- 35+70-74 Published by: UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3334324 Accessed: 14-06-2019 17:17 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected] Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to African Arts This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms
  • 60. ..... .......4. -.k:4 7 Em'i 7A (4) Mosque at Djenne: Interior Labelle Prussin The mosque expresses the crystallization in three dimensions of the unique synthesis between Islamic cultural features and the cultures of indigenous West African societies. THE ARCHITECTURE OF ISLAM IN WEST AFRICA L'architecture a et l'art le plus n~glig6 de l'Afrique: elle a 4t6 6tudiee par les anthropologues et les archbologues qui ne la considerent pas sous son aspect artistique. A cette disaffection s'ajoute la supposition superficielle que l'usage de l'argile, parce qu'elle est une matiere qui manque de permanence,
  • 61. rend la construction trop 6phimere pour justifier des recherches shrieuses. Les mosquies de l'Afrique occidentale, en fait, d6ploient une varit&6 de styles et de formes dont la parfaite harmonie entre la beaut6 struc- turelle et la conception fonctionelle donne naissance A une forme d'art digne d'un grand int&ret. Le d6veloppement de leurs styles peut tre suivi au travers de la chronologie (par exemple, la penetration islamique) ou des conditions g6ographiques (par exemple, le climat). Il aboutit ' une monumen- talit6 qui est bien un caractere propre ~al 'architecture. Labelle Prussin analyse la mosquie soudanaise qu'elle divise en cinq vari6tes: Timbouctou, Djenn6, Bobo Dioulasso, Kong, et Kawara. Du point de vue socio-politico-g,ographique, les caracteres architecturaux de chaque type reflftent les caracteres distinctifs de la r6gion. En d6pit des variations qui modifient I'aspect de la mosqu6e du nord au sud, on peut cependant ais6ment identifier son style. La mosqu6e est une expression concrete du symbolisme, le reflet d'une culture ' un moment particulier dans le temps-bref, tout ce qui contribue a d~finir les canons de l'architecture.
  • 62. The presence of Islam is immediately demonstrated by the mosques, simple or elaborate, set against the skylines of many West African towns. Miss Prussin, an architect who has lived in Africa for several years, here analyzes the stylistic features characterizing these buildings. She argues for their importance both as an art form and as evidence of the synthesis which results when man seeks to achieve monumentality as a testimony of his faith. Numbers within parentheses refer to illustrations. O f all the arts of sub-Saharan Africa, architecture has remained an orphan child. Sculpture, music, the dance, have come into their own, but architecture has remained, with rare exception, an unrecognized art, rel- egated to the realm of anthropology or archeology; even in these disci- plines, references are in the nature of fleeting glimpses, tangential to the main focus of their concern. This lack of attention to African architecture cannot be surprising when one con- siders the reasons which account for such a lacuna in the African Arts. First, perhaps, is the almost complete absence of field studies with an archi-
  • 63. tectural orientation. Ethnographic field- work in Africa has been carried out on a micro-level, anthropologically oriented and geographically localized. A researcher may see and record the building activity of a particular ethnic grouping in the area of his concentra- tion, but either current disfavor to- wards studies in material culture or the researcher's own lack of architec- tural perceptiveness will prevent him from noting the subtleties which an- nounce the presence of an architectural motif. Ethnographic provincialism, the result of in-depth study, has deprived him of a spatial perspective. Not since the aerial framework of Frobenius' 32 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms (1) Sankore mosque at Timbucktoo 2 i .l is . 'II S'C
  • 64. Cs~? * *~ 1d ... . . . : ... . ' !" (2) Tomb of Askia Muhamed at Gao i? ; a." . , . J , ;f Y :? .:. .". ., ;. " .U . ....... . .-.. . . .. . . ?.... ii!. :-'.:" :~;;1. "- . .-?a-r?? -:?I : . ??;--i;?-i4'~~?:: .:,.. ,. . . .. (,,o. ,. - . .,. ., . . ?~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~? r-':,.:..-.,.-:,::"... ,..., (10) Mosque at Kawara t 7 (3) Mosque at Djenne slur Akp. li '' 33 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019
  • 65. 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms b"Y" ~~~Pi~ ,x S-~is~~i~t~t;f~` If 'l r n Y*l i?90;i:iS4 =~C;i i~*:: ~i~F~t~? ;ri i.. ;.r ,, .- Ids~ "???s;c?! I??i~,~q ,... ?n ??k ;~,~C4C ?~*7 ?a 9lp~'j? *'' i ~ds~ s -? : ) *r4. t:. .L~. ; I E.'*x ~r ~r: ?, . r "i xre
  • 66. tf a: ?i ; 1" i.: ??lp3 Ir:; ii. i? r~a --splla i Ei ?ilii .". 1"' i! :?. V i ;i. ?e i 1~ ~91~ ": I ~.j*i;~ 4x~ ~air-~ I ~i~%a~-~bZ~~:~;-~I~ ?"j~J;I~-;;- .?;~aaa~d~llZr-iqpl~;~? Ii _---F~Ciii~-I~Y lrl ~:?I?? ??*1* 3" ~B~?C?~ ? -? ? -1 -- 01~' f i "I- ??;~L.*r???:i:r;liiWuP*l??~~ F1~' r-t~ll I~r~k~;...~ ~Lluru(i?YLdjl~?Pl~i: (7) Mosque at Bobo Dioulasso Monumentality is achieved through a sense
  • 67. of verticality. Kulturkreise, albeit theoretically un- fashionable today, has consideration been given to the geographic or sty- listic extensiveness of architectural forms in sub-Saharan Africa. Secondly, the building technology of sub-Saharan Africa is based on ma- terials of short durability: the life-span of building structures is comparatively short. Mud is not considered a respect- able architectural medium, since his- torically, in the architectural perspec- tive, monumentality is associated with permanence. Stone construction is al- most non-existent today, and what re- mains of stone monuments from past centuries has scarcely been uncovered by the limited resources devoted to African archeology. Third, and perhaps most important is the attitude, shared by architect and layman alike, that building in sub- Saharan Africa is not architecture at all, but at most, building technology: shelter is seen only in terms of the techniques which its builder com- mands, and not in terms of its aesthetic value. The most generous critic will award it the term Urarchitektur, the
  • 68. less generous critic, the term primitive (5) Mosque at Mopti ii:. ?ci4$t.. 4p Nz I Zifs ts s Nsfs s, Wi mm;; Nii .i::?.?:? ? IN ::is 11121EALiiil:i,. ?: 34 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms shelter. Such an attitude is reminiscent of early approaches to African sculp- ture. Imbued with an aesthetic sense
  • 69. socially conditioned by Western philos- ophy, the critic viewed the examples of African sculpture which had found their way to the ethnographic mu- seums of Europe, as immature at- tempts to represent nature. Failing to realize that the bases of reference in Africa differed greatly from those of Europe, the critic failed to place these examples in their proper perspective. As a consequence, a penetrating anal- ysis and study of African aesthetics was, until recently, impossible. Un- fortunately, such Victorian attitudes still prevail with regard to African architecture. The savannah belt of West Africa, an area paralleling the equator, travels east to west and extends from the ancient emporia strung out along the bend of the Niger River to the pe- riphery of the rainforest. Within this belt, the Western Sudan and more specifically the boucle du Niger and the Voltaic Basin are of particular concern to us here. This area is asso- ciated with three important historical sequences: the diaspora of the Mande- speaking people, the northwestern trade routes linking the Niger emporia to Kumasi and the Guinea Coast, and the activities related to the jihad of
  • 70. Samori in the late nineteenth century. It is here that a particular type of mosque abounds which Frobenius, Marty, Trimingham, and others have termed Sudanese, so called simply be- cause it was found in the former French Sudan. From an historical point of view, this area is to be distinguished from its eastern counterpart where Hausa state formation, the Fulani jihads, and the consequences of the northeastern trans-Saharan trade routes gave rise to a different kind of archi- tectural expression. In any savannah environment, and the West African savannah is no ex- ception, mud is used almost exclusively as an indigenous building material by sedentary peoples. But mud can be used in many ways, and indigenous building, diverse in both its forms and in the functions it serves, evidences a wide range of types. The circular roundhouse clusters, capped by their thatched roof bonnets and dispersed over the arid landscape, are at one end of the range. At the other end are the flat-roofed, rectangular houses replete with pierced parapet walls, crowded into tightly nucleated villages which appear in the distance as small, forti- fied medieval towns. Intermingled with
  • 71. this range of sedentary buildings are the various nomadic .transient shelters of thatch, woven mats, or skins, whose Continued on p. 70 i . a i i Statue, 4th-5th Century BC, now exhibited at Addis Ababa Ethiopia is a fascinating combination of prehistoric and modern Africa. Fly there on Ethiopian Airlines' beautifully equipped Boeing Fan Jets from Madrid, Frankfurt, Rome, Athens, Beirut or New Delhi. See the ancient rock-carved churches of Lalibela, the awesome majesty of the Blue Nile's Tisisat Falls, Axum, Gondar, and Bahar Dar, on Ethiopian Airlines' Historic Tour from Addis Ababa or Asmara. Exciting East and West Africa are only a short flight from Europe on Ethiopian Airlines. FRANKFURT ROME MADRID ~-A IATHENS BEIRUT KHARTOUM CAIRO KARACHI--DELHI ASMARA ADEN ACCRA- LAGOS ADDIS-ABABA - DJDIBOUTI ENTEBBE NAIROBI
  • 72. DAR ES SALAAM ~CIC P O Y~ld 9 '8rr t MRLINj LJIEIN S Offices in North America: NEW YORK: 51 E. 42nd St. * HOLLYWOOD: 1800 N. Argyle St. Visit the nearest T Office or your Travel Agent 35 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms "C'est magnitique" Le Californien, journal frangais de la c6te Pacifique accueille avec enthousiasme
  • 73. AFRICAN ARTS IARTS D'AFRIQUE nouvelle revue bilingue consacr6e aux Arts de l'Afrique sous toutes leurs formes. UNE BONNE IDEE abonnez-vous des pr6sent " AFRICAN ARTS I/ARTS D'AFRJQUE un an, 50 NF (6tudiants et professeurs, 40 NF), deux ans, 80 NF (6tudiants et professeurs, 70 NF). UN CADEAU A FAIRE? rien ne sera mieux appr6ci6 que notre revue. Si vous etes d6ja abonn6, tout abonnement suppl6mentaire ne cotite que 40 NF par an ou 70 NF pour deux ans. DES RELATIONS D'AFFAIRES
  • 74. EN AFRIQUE ? pourquoi ne pas faire un cadeau h vos clients- les exemplaires fournis en gros b6n6ficieront de conditions spdciales. Toute demande de renseignements ou de tarifs de publicit6 peut &tre adress6e ~: airican arts/arts d'afrique Universit6 de Californie, Los Angeles, California 90024 Continued from p. 35 occupants live in symbiotic relation- ship with their sedentary mud-building neighbors. Whether this broad range of build- ing types, each with its attendent tech- nology, constitutes architecture, is still open to question. However, the Su- danese mosque, appearing as a singu- lar, unified form throughout the area, seems to evidence many of the cur- rently prescribed canons of architec- ture. It pervades the area, dominating
  • 75. a wealth of ethnic building diversity. Stylized and symbolic, it is immediately identifiable visually. While some degree of modification occurs in the form as it disperses across the savannah belt, the basic form remains, recognizable and distinctive. When discussing almost any topic relating to the Western Sudan, one fact must be kept in mind: the presence of Islam-a force which pervades all as- pects of the community in which it is found. It is Islam as a force that gave rise to the mosques, palaces, and tombs found there. In recent years, what can be referred to as the Architecture of Islam has been studied in great detail by such authorities as Creswell, Ter- rasse, and others; however, their ex- tensive fieldwork was concerned with the Near East, North Africa, and southern Spain, not with sub-Saharan Africa. A scholar interested in the archi- tecture of Islam in this part of the world must comb through available material contained in Arabic sources, in accounts by eighteenth and nine- teenth century explorers and travelers, in archeological reports, and in micro- ethnographic descriptions. Further, in order to understand the Islamic archi- tecture of the Western Sudan, it is
  • 76. necessary to become familiar with the history of Islamic penetration into West Africa, i.e., the processes of syn- thesis which took place between the evangelists of Islam and the indigenous cultures they encountered, as well as with the nature of the cultures them- selves. Only then does it become pos- sible to comprehend architecturally not only the mosque, but the tomb and the palace. Only then is it possible to trace the impact of Islam on indige- nous building forms. While the architecture of the Su- danese mosque derives from North Africa, Islamic architecture in West Africa is nevertheless unique. It is a corruption of neither Egyptian nor North African form but expresses in its essence the adjustments and modi- fications to the highly ritualized char- acter of Islam, which specifically pre- scribes both the floor plan of a mosque and the activities relevant to its use. THE ARCHITECTURE OF ISLAM Although elsewhere Islamic archi- tecture generally includes palaces and tombs as well as mosques, in West Africa it is the mosque which embodies Islam. Palaces and tombs are promi- nent only during the span of the Is-
  • 77. lamic empires of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai. They appeared only when commercial development fostered the growth of urban centers and generated the emergence of class groupings. These in turn subsumed the preceding network of kinship relationships and permitted the establishment of an in- cipient state structure, at whose seats in the urban centers the sites of pal- aces and tombs were to be found. On the other hand, the mosque as an architectural feature is omnipresent, both spatially and temporally, despite the formal variations which may occur in its diaspora from north to south. The spread of Islam into the west- ern savannah falls into a number of historical phases. These phases each represent, in turn, a new cultural pattern, varying with the process of acculturation to Islam. If an architec- tural style is a manifestation of a cul- ture as a whole, representing the crys- tallization of a number of cultural dimensions-not only those of environ- ment and technology, but those of so- cial, political, and economic spheres as well-it should be possible to relate the qualitative variables, which the mosque evidences, to the historical
  • 78. phases through which Islam passed. It is, in fact, this interplay between the various cultural dimensions, changing over time and space in their physical expression, that constitutes the fabric of architectural history. Formal modifications, which take place in the mosque as it travels from north to south, pertain to size and scale, structure itself, finesse of construction and detail, definition of plane surfaces and the degree of verticality, as well as to the deviations from the prescribed plan layout which Islamic orthodoxy demands. This gradual formal trans- formation results from many factors, of which the changes in climatic con- ditions, the present and available build- ing materials, and the techniques and skills of construction are but a few. Equally important are the location of the mosque in an urban or rural milieu, the method by which it was estab- lished in the area-whether by a single marabout, by a migrant people, or the result of state-building activity-and the degree of acceptance or rejection of Islam and the related cultural at- tributes of Islam by a host group. The architecture of the Sudanese mosque is, like its substrata of savan-
  • 79. 70 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms nah building technology, essentially mud architecture. While mud as a building material permits great flexi- bility and fluidity in the treatment of plane surfaces, it imposes great limita- tions upon potential structural form. Thus, within the discipline of the ma- terial, a number of basic variations emerge. These variations group them- selves into five categories: the Tim- bucktu, Djenne, Bobo Dioulasso, Kong, and Kawara types. This classification relates not only to alteration in the formal arrangement of minarets, stairs, and inner courtyards, which are the result of deviation from prescribed practice and politics of orthodox Islam, but to stylistic and qualitative dimen- sions as well. In turn, these five types find correlation with the historical pe- riods of Islam's penetration into West Africa and with the changing cultural character of each period. The first phase in the spread of Islam into the Western Sudan began with the influx of Arabized Berber traders
  • 80. and clerics from Mauretania, reaching its apex in the adoption of Islam as an imperial cult. This expansion, per- sonified in the fame of Mansa Musa and Askia Muhamed I, was centered in the great urban trading capitals of first, Timbucktu (see Illustration 1) and then, Gao. Islam as an imperial cult was an urban phenomenon, limited to the immediate trading community. Here it existed side by side with a mosaic of indigenous African religions. The lack of both a rural base and con- flict with traditional rule lent a dualist character to Islam. It is to this phase of Islamic history that the Timbucktu type, exemplified in both the Djingue- reber and the Sankore mosques, as well as in the tomb of Askia Muhamed at Gao (2), corresponds. Its appearance is limited to a few major urban centers, at that time entre- pots of trans-Saharan trade and the seats of precarious empires. The massive scale and the pyramidal minarets gen- erate an extreme feeling of heaviness, a heaviness further accentuated by the lack of plane definition. The minarets are built up solidly of mud, permitting only a shaft-like access to their roofs. The exterior surface of the minarets are pierced by projecting timbers which, while appearing haphazard, nevertheless provide permanent scaf- folding for the maintenance of mud
  • 81. wall surfaces-a requirement imposed by climatic conditions. They also trans- mit the stresses which are set up when a mass of mud is subjected to rapid changes in humidity and temperature. The timbers thus serve to concentrate the resultant cracking along prescribed lines. Tradition credits the introduction of the Sudanese building style as a whole, and the Timbucktu type in particular, to an Andalusian poet, Es-Saheli, who was brought back by Mansa Musa on his return from a grand pilgrimage to Mecca. However, the tradition has been questioned by a number of au- thorities. Architectural style is rarely set by a single designer functioning out of his milieu. The adaptation of a style requires a supporting technology and skills derivative of the cultural set- ting into which it is introduced, both of which were lacking at Timbucktu. Timbucktu never developed as a center of Negro-Islamic learning, de- spite the existence of a university center there. It never became a true city-state, and its peoples remained heterogene- ous, never constituting a unified group. The city was kept in a continual state of insecurity by its own disunity and by the continual harassment of no- madic Tuareg tribes. Thus the architec-
  • 82. ture of its mosques, while massive and powerful in scale, remains heavy and crude. Nonetheless, these Great Mosques do represent the most ancient prototype of Islamic architecture in West Africa, a prototype which has persisted in time. Although the recon- struction of the Sankore mosque is of recent date, it continues to embody the earlier form. Contrary to general impression, it was Djenne rather than Timbucktu which developed not only into a more stable center of trade, but became the intellectual seat of Negro-Islamic learn- ing. As a city-state, Djenne was sup- ported in its hinterland by a strong agricultural foundation, and its posi- tion on the Bani River protected it with an admirable network of water- ways. As a consequence, it was not subject to the same ravages which be- leaguered Timbucktu. Djenne marks a second phase in Islamic history, a phase in which Negro-Islamic culture flourished over a number of centuries. With the growth of a stable, urban milieu, there developed the skilled craftsmanship so essential for the growth of an articulate architecture. Djenne's cityscape is characterized by a distinctive, carefully articulated ar- chitectural flavor, a flavor which be- comes crystallized in its mosque. Since climatic restrictions placed upon mud
  • 83. construction within the Niger flood plains are no different than those fur- ther north, contrast with the Timbucktu type can only be explained culturally. The Djenne type of mosque(3), paralleling the apical role and position of Djenne in West African history, ap- pears as a quintessence of architectural form. Formal elements are carefully and sharply defined in the interplay of wall surfaces, in parapet construction, and through the use and placement of wooden dentils obtained by cutting the Where in the World can you find copies of african arts/arts d'afrique for sale? well, for example - in Ibadan, Nigeria: University Book Shop in Monrovia, Liberia: Ahmadiyya Mission Bookshop 116 Carey Street in New York: Hacker's Art Books
  • 84. 54 West 57th Street in Auckland, New Zealand: Paul's Arcade Book Shop P.O. Box 3576 in Brussels: Le Livre Africain 40 rue du Champ de Mars in Chicago: Sticks and Stones, Inc. 5210 S. Harper Avenue in London: Dillon's University Bookshop, Ltd. 1 Malet Street, W.C. 1 in Paris: Agence Hachette 79, Blvd. St. Germain in Blantyre, Malawi: Times Record Shop P.O. Box 445 If you have an interested and discriminating clientele, won't you
  • 85. inquire of us concerning arrangements to handle african arts/arts d'afrique and to act as subscription agents? african arts/arts d'afriaue UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024 71 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms trunks of the fan palm. The symmetry of its facade, composed of three major minarets rhythmically interspersed with absolutely vertical buttresses, competes with the best traditions of the Beaux Arts. Above all, it achieves a sense of verticality--one of those canons of architecture--unrivalled in this part of the world. In contrast to the Timbucktu type which possesses only a feeling for mass, the Djenne mosque achieves a remarkable sense of spatial enclosure. The minarets are not built up of a mass of solid material, but rather enclose an ample set of spiral mud stairs which leads upwards
  • 86. to the roof from where the muezzin calls the faithful to prayer: the mina- rets are thus an expression of their true function. The incorporation of the minaret as an integral element of the facade itself marks an innovation in mosque design. The mosque interior with its rhythmic definition of space might, with a bit of imagination, easily satisfy the criterion of loftiness with which Gothic architecture endows the cathedral(4). Its setting, conforming to the classic tenets of urban design, provides a formal approach which per- mits the viewer to marvel at the mag- nitude of its scale and structure, a magnitude enhanced by the residual architecture which serves as its back- drop. The Djenne prototype can be found in a number of large towns bordering the Niger flood plains, such as at Mopti(5) and San(6). The mosques at Mopti and San, although reputed to have been built by Djenne craftsmen, do not retain the qualitative level of the Djenne mosque. The one at Mopti, while retaining the finesse of detail and an equally sharp delineation of surfaces in its buttressing, is deprived of some of its monumentality by both the ab- sence of a plaza-type approach and the lack of a strongly defined facade sym- metry. The mosque at San, while very
  • 87. much a replica of Djenne in regard to symmetry and approach, suffers in the articulation of its detail, the sharpness of delineation, and in its verticality. While the mosques at Timbucktu, dating back many centuries, have been continuously modified as a result of annual maintenance, the mosque at Djenne and its replicas are of recent vintage, dating from the turn of this century. It would seem that the per- sistence of a constant form over such a great span of time provides one of the keys to an understanding of their unique quality. They remain a testi- mony to the early centuries of Islamic penetration into West Africa, marking a period of expansive state-building activity. The Djenne and Timbucktu types eventually merge, giving rise centuries later to two new variations: the Bobo Dioulasso (7) and the Kong(8) types, both found in the southerly savannah reaches of the Western Sudan, in an area encompassed by the activities rel- evant to the Samori fihad. Both types relate to the dispersion of and the col- onization by Mande peoples moving down from the northwest, a diaspora initiated and led by their trading
  • 88. classes. Although the Mande immi- grants into the southern savannah zones were pagan, the trading classes among them were Muslims. It was the Muslim Mande traders who, extending their commercial activities over vast areas of what is now the northern Ivory Coast, northwestern Ghana, and the southern Upper Volta, created the commercial centers around which Mus- lim communities grew. However, these centers were in large measure autono- mous, their solidarity reinforced through isolation. Where their commercial ac- tivity enabled them to increase their influence over the surrounding pagan communities, they were able to gain political control and to form small village-states. Thus, Bobo Dioulasso and Kong types are an expression of a politico-religious structure vested in a village---in contrast to the earlier large mosques which were symbolic of an imperial organization. As a conse- quence, they are much smaller in scale and lack the monumentality which characterize both the Timbucktu and Djenne types. They appear as small, modified scale models of their north- ern counterparts. Distinctions between the Bobo and Kong types rest primar- ily on an adaptation to climatic condi- tions, rather than on distinctions in
  • 89. cultural tradition. At Bobo Dioulasso, the vertical but- tressing so sharply delineated at Djenne is still discernible, as are the dominat- ing minarets derivative of Timbucktu. However, the flaring out and thicken- ing of the buttress elements at their base detracts from the quality of ver- tical rhythm, a quality still evident but rapidly disappearming under the on- slaught of reduced scale and climatic accommodation. Projecting timbers, particularly from the two minarets, still manage to retain a semblance of regularity, but their multiplicity, cou- pled with the introduction of horizontal bracing between the dominant but- tress forms, detracts further from ver- ticality. Both innovations are a function of the increased humidity of the south- ern savannah. Despite these modifica- tions, however, the classic mosque floor plan with its enclosed prayer hall, its mihrab, its interior courtyard, and internal stair spiraling within the mina- ret to the roof, all remain. Kong, another one-time capital of a village-state, was an important Muslim Mande center of commerce, lying much closer to the rainforest. Timber here is both more plentiful and avail- able in greater lengths. But it is never-
  • 90. theless savannah timber, characterized by gnarling and distortive growth, in contrast to the straight grain of the fan palm which is available further north. The increased rains require even heavier buttressing and increased an- nual maintenance, as well as additional horizontal reinforcing. The result is an architectural form which uses and re- flects a second material: wood. How- ever, this now extensive use of timber reinforcing, while creating an interest- ing contrast of media, at the same time introduces horizontality as a major de- sign feature. There is a further decrease in buttress definition, and a more bul- bous minaret emerges. The minaret, now a solid mass of mud, no longer houses the access stair. It has lost its function, remaining only as a symbolic link to Mecca. One almost feels as if the mosque at Kong does not quite get off the ground. The use of timber for horizontal bracing in the proximity of the rain- forest is a function of the size of the mosque. The size of the mosque is itself a function of the urban milieu. As a consequence, the use of horizontal timber bracing in the southern savan- nah prevails only in the larger mosques, those found in the centers of what were once village-states. As one moves out into the rural landscape, the scale of the mosque, such as that of Lara-
  • 91. banga (9), diminishes further, a result not only of size, but of the broader based buttressing which the lack of building skill demands. Islam comes to the rural scene in the person of a single marabout, and he builds from memory a replica of a mosque seen elsewhere, without benefit of either supporting skills, technology, or com- mitment to Islam by the host popula- tion. The mosque gradually loses any resemblance, in its plan, to either its northern counterparts or to the rigid prescriptions of Islamic orthodoxy. En- trances, losing their human scale, be- come diminutive, so that it becomes Continued on p. 74 *'M ;? ::: t') X i .:N. e? . em N :Xii::::1::i~~e;~ 6:: (6) Mosque at San 72
  • 92. This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms c., .. ... .... :?i~ WEST AFRICA OQE i. m: i .... ... A N ?A GE NERAI R~ IT `:X~ R I. T". A,`~ . . ... ... ... ::,IEli ei~: Siliiiiiii~a~Iii ~ i~';l~i~il;;j~r':lr~ill:iii~i ?:.~ii'l: ':,ir~i~~:i?'~i~::ii?::;.i':i?: ??:i;:'ii~iiirliiii:' '';l:.i~:iliiiil~i~~!,~i m: 51 itst~tZii; :iililiiil~::i !?;!;i?:i~iiiii2 ii ~ ~ ? I:;'i~iii RIE? iiiil~~iiirIiii:iiliiiil~i~i:, lii:iiiiil~ii~i'I$~~iiiiiii~jig~ Ji~l~i;~iiiC~iiiiij~. sig 8i': Ik III W11111itiiiir~iiiiiilliiilii iiiii~iiaiiitiiii;;iai!:ir~pi '41itB :iiliil 'i!:,ieiii n~~iliiii .......... V ROMii fiiii~iiillilaiiil~tir~i~iimm~ .16 .H r...! Nii,?~i:' i It , NMI?.i i~liiiiliirl~iii;iii iIi:,iiieiii MORA Mitiiliiii w RM N, i
  • 93. V; :x:::-7;!u"SH---Ki-:-t" zir '.1, fN Pmg !,: Mai 0i:~sa M-m .00 3,"i~~ " n~; ~ 1~M EXI :i~i Rig: ifill. - "HIMM AM U-1. aldi~iZ il~iwgmii silM1 nmmjm--61:3..St_ U 1 . !, -1 i i togy! -.J7 sig 5z; i ::: st M,. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i;i'~ :ftfliil~if .7 "SAM :,r a ?j "lirr~~ ?R- A-A 7~i~ OR 112% X . is : Xm -t : - 4?t: X~l /2? ? I?b? Z XN it This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Continued from p. 72 necessary to stoop in order to enter. The minaret loses its dominant posi- tion in the design and is hardly dis-
  • 94. tinguishable from the bulk of buttress- ing. Finally, as if to complete the cycle, the Kawara mosque stands as the epitomy of a rural mosque(10). Al- though absolutely fluid in its three di- mensions, the Kawara type is totally lacking in either verticality or monu- mentality. It no longer possesses any architectural feeling for spatial enclos- ure, remaining rather with only a sculp- tural feeling for mass. Architectural form has dissolved into sculptural form. The use of the mosque interior has been abandoned-it no longer has an architectural function. Its plan bears no resemblance to the classic mosque form, and Friday activities take place in a demarcated open space adjoining the symbolic structure. It is this type of mosque, not as well executed, not as striking, not as consistent in its sculp- tural fluidity as the Kawara example, which prevails on the rural savannah landscape. Thus, although there exists a singular architectural style in West Africa, vari- ous factors have entered into its altera- tion and modification as it traveled from the bend of the Niger River to the periphery of the rainforest in the wake of Islamic penetration. The modifica- tion was explained only in part by
  • 95. attempts to maintain a form arising out of one set of environmental con- ditions, in areas where physical condi- tions were less conducive to its mainte- nance. A major part of the explanation lies rather in the less rigid adherence to the dogma and forms prescribed by Islamic doctrine. If it is true that archi- tecture is a conscious expression of commitment, that it is a physical ex- pression for symbolism, that it is an intellectualization of material elements arranged in three dimensions, that it is actually a reflection of culture at a given point in time, then any changes which take place in that particular culture are also reflected architectur- ally. The modifications witnessed in the mosque form support the above hypothesis, for indeed the basic revi- sions to, and the relaxations of, Islamic dogma, are reflected in the architecture of the Sudanese mosque. Architectural expression involves a constancy of form which gives rise to a style, an accompanying emotional involvement by the viewer and the user, and a monumentality through which symbolism is achieved. Where these qualities exist, one can speak of
  • 96. architecture as being present. Architecture, unlike the other fine arts, deals with the problem of use/ utility/function alongside the problem of symbolic expression. A piece of ar- chitecture, in addition to being of direct physical service to man, becomes an expression of his social and cultural aspirations. When, as in the case of an arc de triomphe, the symbolism itself is its function, the structure created moves over into the realm of sculpture. When architectural forms become a style, they act as a vehicle of expres- sion for group identification. However, certain requisites should be fulfilled be- fore this emotional involvement can be attached to a physical manifesta- tion: an institutionalization of that expression into a system of constant elements, forms, and qualities within a society, and the visual identity of a particular structure through a unity of formal elements. As one traces the Sudanese mosque from its northerly-most Timbucktu site to its southerly-most Kong site, the consistency of its form is striking. De- spite the modifications which occur, this constancy of symbolic form is so
  • 97. strong that no matter where one trav- els, no matter what the indigenous ethnically defined building patterns may be, the mosque is immediately identifiable by its distinctive architec- tural features. The use of architectural form to achieve explicit symbolic statements of the nature of a society is not unique in history: the pyramids, the feudal castle, St. Peters, Versailles, or Brasilia, as well as the Great Mosques of Kairo- uan or Cordova are all illustrative of the cultures which created them. The Su- danese mosque is no different. It, too, is a symbolization achieved by emotional response which a visual identity evokes. The mosque embodies the role of islam in West Africa as a religious, political, and an economic force. It is also necessary to distinguish the symbolism of an ancestral shrine from the symbolism involved in the expres- sion of a range of socio-political rela- tionships within society. The shrine has a symbolic value only for the all- inclusive role which kinship plays in a particular society; but when the so- ciety becomes more differentiated and S . .; ... i:.. . ... ..... ? ~ ~ ~ -? n'i: :: "? : ?i;;::;:+;:ii:+. :? : + ,; Alil MAN IS
  • 98. ,o ., (8) Mosque at Kong the ruling powers are desirous of maintaining their position, symbolism achieves permanence through monu- mentality. Dwellings are not monu- mental nor are the shrines within them. Only those edifices which express the prevailing dominant theme running through the fabric of a society can achieve monumentality. In the history of West Africa it is the mosque, and not the pagan tribal head's "palace," which has achieved architectural monu- mentality. The mosque becomes an expression of the multiple role which Islam played in subsuming the kinship function and in creating an incipient state structure. Indigenous cultures were, in the main, acephalous or poly- cephalous societies with little political differentiation. Hence the residences of tribal rulers, while boasting superb sculptural appendages, never achieved the level of architectural definition or distinction which might lay a base for monumentality. Monumentality is achieved formally through a sense of verticality-both symbolic and accessible-whether it be the Sumer ziggurat, the Gothic
  • 99. spire, the U.N. Building or the Islamic minaret. One is tempted to use the prevalence of a vertical quality in the Sudanese mosque as a measure of Islam's efficacy within a particular in- digenous culture as one follows the basic form in its journey from Djenne to Kawara. Architecture has been defined as a physical expression involving a con- stancy of form and an accompanying symbolism. Such symbolism, when all- encompassing, is embodied in monu- mentality as a qualitative dimension. Verticality is one of the means by which such monumentality is achieved. All the above noted qualities are pres- ent, in varying degree, in the Islamic architecture of West Africa, as em- bodied in its mosques. Singular and distinctive, the Sudanese mosques are three-dimensional crystallizations of the unique synthesis between the kind of Islam which penetrated from across the Sahara and the indigenous cultures of West Africa-a synthesis nutured in the savannah environment. I . . ... . .... ....... ?;i~ A 4 Fil . .. .. .. . . . .. . .. . .. . 4WF
  • 100. (9) Mosque at Larabanga 74 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Fri, 14 Jun 2019 17:17:02 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Contents323334357071727374Issue Table of ContentsAfrican Arts, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Winter, 1968), pp. 1-88Front Matter [pp. 3- 81]First Word [pp. 1-2]I Saw and I Was Happy: Festival at Oshogbo [pp. 8-17+85]Return to Origins: New Directions for African Arts [pp. 18- 25+88]䱥⁔棨浥⁤攠污⁖楯汥湣攮⁄慮猠猠⁒猠猠⁁猠 猠猠猠猠猠猠猠猠⁆猠猠̦ 猠猠猠가猠猠㤶㈠孰瀮′㘭㌱⬷㔭㜷�The Architecture of Islam in West Africa [pp. 32-35+70-74]From... by... and for... Ralph C. Altman [pp. 36-39+78-79]Ralph C. Altman, 1909-1967 [p. 39]Professionals and Amateurs: The Musicians of Zaria and Obimo [pp. 40-45+80+82-84]PoemsDeath of the Mahogany [p. 46]The Old Sea Chain [pp. 46-47]L'imagerie Rituelle en Afrique Noire [pp. 48-53+86-87]Les Masques Africains [pp. 54- 56+58-60]The Literature of Cape Verde [pp. 62-64]Letter from Nairobi [pp. 66-69]Back Matter Terracotta Statuettes from Mali Author(s): Roderick J. McIntosh and Susan Keech McIntosh Source: African Arts, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Feb., 1979), pp. 51-53+91 Published by: UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3335485 Accessed: 28-01-2020 03:38 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars,
  • 101. researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected] Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to African Arts This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Tue, 28 Jan 2020 03:38:22 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Terracotta Statuettes from Mali '',a I' a :~ I : k! g ...... The first discovery of terracotta stat- uary from the Inland Delta of Mali was reported over thirty-five years ago (Vieillard 1940). Fully fifteen statuettes in related styles have subsequently been described in print, all the result of chance surface discoveries in the region stretch- ing from Jenne' to Mopti, and at least
  • 102. one hundred more are housed in Euro- pean museums or private collections. The importance of this group of terracot- tas lies in the fact that they constitute one of several major West African terracotta traditions, including Nok, Ife and Sao, which have been revealed primarily through archaeological pursuits (legiti- mate or otherwise!). Unfortunately, little could be said, until recently, of the tem- poral placement or cultural context of the Inland Delta figures. In reviewing an exhibition at which several of these ter- racottas were displayed, Labelle Prussin summed up the problem for the readers of African Arts several years ago: "There is . . . presently no basis on which to establish any datings or provenance for these so-called Djenne and Mopti terra cottas .... Only a controlled archeolog- ical investigation in the area may ulti- mately reveal the nature and extent of terra cotta art history in the area" (Prussin 1973:67). Such an archaeological project was recently undertaken in the Inland Niger Delta. In the course of it, a statuette was recovered from a secure archaeological context for which a radiocarbon determination was sub- sequently obtained (Fig. 4). The excavations were carried out from
  • 103. February to May, 1977, at the large mound of Jenne-jeno, which rises above the flood plain three kilometers south- east of the present city of Jenne. Justly famed for her pre-eminent position as a trading entrep6t in the Middle Ages, Jenne was intimately linked with Tim- buktu in the commercial networks that extended from the Akan forest region across the Sahara Desert to North Africa. Oral tradition claims Jennd-jeno (literally "ancient Jenn&" in Songhai) to be the ancestral site of the present town. The archaeological richness of this vast site is attested to by the thick scattering of sur- face remains that blanket the 900-meter length of Jenne-jeno. Hundreds of mud-brick house foundations and funerary urns have been exposed by ero- sion, and segments of the city wall can be traced at many points on the periphery of the mound. Several 3 x 3 meter pits were excavated, revealing 5 meters of unbroken Iron Age deposits. Early radiocarbon results indicate that the mound of Jenne-jeno was built up dur- ing the course of more than a millenium of continuous human occupation, and that abandonment of the site was in
  • 104. progress by A.D. 1500. These dates im- mediately imply that the urban dwellers of Jenne-jeno witnessed, and possibly contributed to, the rise of the great Em- pire of Mali. Unlike the early forest civili- zations of Ife and Benin, little is known of the art produced by the succession of Sudanic empires that held sway over the Inland Niger Delta from the eighth to the sixteenth century. For this reason, the recovery of a terracotta statuette from our final excavation unit constituted an important art historical as well as ar- chaeological discovery. This final pit was sunk in a relatively high section of the mound, in what ap- peared to be a residential quarter. Sur- face features in the area excavated in- cluded the intersecting foundations of a round and a square house (Fig. 1), and a large, spherical painted pot, which was unusual for the region. Excavation was made difficult by the fact that both house foundations were made of djennifre, the mud bricks shaped into truncated cones that were considered the trademark of masons from Jenne. Surface erosion had caused all bricks, those in walls as well as those collapsed to the side, to merge in a confused mass. Only patient excavation
  • 105. and exposure of each individual brick allowed us to trace the foundations. It was at the eastern edge of the round T il ll,? i 1 _A4,%**?" 4?1-: A4-~?~~ga~~ MW" .,T :7. Ak,: 1. STATUETTE AND ASSOCIATED POTTERY IMMEDIATELY UPON EXPOSURE. 51 This content downloaded from 129.49.5.35 on Tue, 28 Jan 2020 03:38:22 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms house that the terracotta statuette was found, its base resting 0.875 meter below the surface. Physically, the statuette was in only fair condition; the base had bro- ken and partially crumbled prior to ex- posure, probably due to the extremely coarse fabric of the terracotta and poor
  • 106. firing. Stylistically, the statuette showed strong affinities to the wide-eyed, prog- nathic style that is well known from the Inland Niger Delta. The figure is in a kneeling posture with the legs forming part of the rectangular base. The limbs on several of the other statuettes from the area are represented in a similar two-dimensional style that was achieved by incising the outlines of legs into the modeled clay base (Malzy 1967:18; Monod 1943:11; Haselberger 1966:144). Some kind of covering from the waist to just above the knees is suggested by a series of incised parallel lines. The arms are crossed over the chest with hands rest- ing on the shoulders, a statuette posture reported by Szumowski (1955:67). A large torque hangs about the neck, and a number of deep incisions at the wrist and lower arm undoubtedly represent bracelets. The head is markedly prog- nathous and flattened along the axis of the chin. Bulging "cowrie shell" eyes are found on the majority of the published statuettes, although they are often more exaggerated than those of the Jenn&-jeno find. The terracotta was slipped a deep reddish-brown. The curious spherical pot, mentioned earlier, which was found within both the round and rectilinear foundations, had
  • 107. lain immediately above the statuette. A number of other ceramic objects were found in direct association with the statuette. To the immediate south and west of the terracotta were a round object with multiple serpent motifs in relief, a deep, narrow pot with horizontal flanges (similar pots are today used as water beakers), a ceramic mortar and pestle with traces of a red substance (ochre?), and a large carinated bowl containing carbonized rice (Oryza glaberrima) and purslane (Portulaca oleracea). Several ob- jects resembling these have been re- ported in association with terracotta statuettes at other sites in the Inland Delta (Masson-Detourbet 1953:100-102). At the same depth as the base of the statuette and within the fill of the round house, we collected a large sample of charcoal. Radiocarbon dating of this sample has given a result of A.D. 1150+ 140 (Lab # RL 806: 830+ 140 B.P.), which must be statistically interpreted as mean- ing that there is a 66% probability that the actual date of the charcoal falls be- tween A.D. 1010 and A.D. 1290. The statuette, therefore, was probably placed in the position in which we found it
  • 108. sometime between A.D. 1000-1300. As far as we are able to tell, the statuette was not placed in a pit and buried. Rather, it appears that all the ceramic pieces were placed together in a round structure, the walls of which were then deliberately collapsed so that what remained was a pile of mud-brick rubble about a meter high. The square wall and unusual spherical pot may have functioned to mark the site, but it is en- tirely possible that their close spatial rela- tionship to the statuette is purely coinci- dental. It may be that the statuette and as- sociated pottery were deposited in the course of a ritual directed toward ances- tor worship. Ancestral cults continued to flourish in Jenne as late as 1910, when Monteil recorded their existence. At that time, a small ancestral "altar" could be found in the entryway of many Jenne houses, consisting of a platform on which was placed a human representa- tion of the revered ancestor. Sacrifices were made to the deceased through the medium of the statuette (Monteil 1971:136-137). The use of human figurines in ancestral cults is historically and ethnographically documented over