Maskette - Russia, Siberia, Evenki
Similar Sale History
Recommended Items
Item Details
Description
metal (white tin/copper/brass), old collection label "Eskimo Siberia HW21 19/6/21", base
A simple, hammered dot decoration is recognisable along the edge. The human facial features are highly simplified. It is possible that the plaque was originally conceived as a plain pendant which was modified. The reuse of metal for the manufacture of all kinds of shamanic equipment was a common practice among the Evenks.
In terms of size, it could be categorised as an idol mask (up to 8 cm). They served as facial covers for wooden figures that contained the soul of a deceased person or assisting spirit. The figures were dressed and attached to the robes of shamans (cf. Ron Bronckers, 2021, p. 73).
However, the plaque could also have been used in the cult of the dead. Bronckers refers to the tradition of placing silver plaques on the eyes of the dead instead of death masks.
D: 6 cm, D: 2,4 inch
Provenance:
Old Anthropologist Collection
Jeffrey Myers, New York, USA
Lit.: Ron Bronckers, "Masks of the Evenki and Magyar - New Connections", p. 79, fig. 13, in Tribal XXV:3-Number 100, Summer 2021, p. 72-81
Margolis, Richard, Ancient Bronze Art and Ethnographic Objects from Siberia and the Urals, Seattle 2023
A simple, hammered dot decoration is recognisable along the edge. The human facial features are highly simplified. It is possible that the plaque was originally conceived as a plain pendant which was modified. The reuse of metal for the manufacture of all kinds of shamanic equipment was a common practice among the Evenks.
In terms of size, it could be categorised as an idol mask (up to 8 cm). They served as facial covers for wooden figures that contained the soul of a deceased person or assisting spirit. The figures were dressed and attached to the robes of shamans (cf. Ron Bronckers, 2021, p. 73).
However, the plaque could also have been used in the cult of the dead. Bronckers refers to the tradition of placing silver plaques on the eyes of the dead instead of death masks.
D: 6 cm, D: 2,4 inch
Provenance:
Old Anthropologist Collection
Jeffrey Myers, New York, USA
Lit.: Ron Bronckers, "Masks of the Evenki and Magyar - New Connections", p. 79, fig. 13, in Tribal XXV:3-Number 100, Summer 2021, p. 72-81
Margolis, Richard, Ancient Bronze Art and Ethnographic Objects from Siberia and the Urals, Seattle 2023
Condition
See description
Buyer's Premium
- 30%
Maskette - Russia, Siberia, Evenki
Estimate €2,000 - €3,000
Get approved to bid.
Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Wurzburg, Bavaria, deOffers In-House Shipping
Local Pickup Available
Payment
Auction Curated By
Expert for African and Oceanic Art
Expert for Pre-Columbian and Classical Antiquities
Related Searches
TOP