animal mask
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- character of composition
- In mask: Social and religious uses
Animal masks, their features elongated and formalized, are common in western Africa. Dried grass, woven palm fibres, coconuts, and shells, as well as wood are employed in the masks of New Guinea, New Ireland, and New Caledonia. Represented are fanciful birds, fishes, and animals with…
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- In mask: Social and religious uses
use in
- African cultures
- In African dance: Masquerade dancers
Animal masks are a common feature of masking societies throughout Africa. In Mali the Tyiwara spirit masqueraders of the Bambara people carry formalized carvings of antelopes and other wild animals, dancing in imitation of their movements to promote the fertility of land and community. The…
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- In African dance: Masquerade dancers
- primitive cultures
- In mask: Social and religious uses
…or other animal into one mask. Some of these articulating masks acted out entire legends as their parts moved.
Read More - In mask: Therapeutic uses
The antelope is believed to have introduced agriculture, and so, when crops are sown, members of Tyiwara society cavort in the fields in pairs to symbolize fertility and abundance.
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- In mask: Social and religious uses