N. NIGERIAN BIRD DECOY 5

Photographs © Tim Hamill

N. NIGERIAN
Bird Decoy 5
17.25" high x 11" wide x 3.75" deep
$250
SOLD

This bird decoy has been vetted as authentic with signs of significant use and age. This decoy incorporates an actual bird skull and beak, is almost completely covered in leather and has a cloth strap to fasten the decoy onto the hunter's head. It has white shell eyes.

There are animal costumes which help hunters approach their prey unnoticed until it is in range of arrow shot.
Hunting masks have a practical use and their wearing is functionally determined. In contrast to the symbolic suggestions of ritual masks, these animal masks worn by hunters are as naturalistic as possible. But they also have supernatural functions. Firstly by imitating the prey the hunter becomes one with it, allowing him to impose his will on the creature he stalks. Secondly by using the powers of the local medicine man to credit the mask with supernatural or magical powers, use of the fetish was an active way of attempting to influence the outcome of the hunt.
The Hausa and the Nupe live in central and northern Nigeria and Niger in an area of savannah. Before major communal hunts (bago) the hunters gather wearing a bird head dress over a black cloth or goatskin. The head dress is constructed from a wooden core covered with antelope skin and with a padded forehead stump. The mask is held in place on the head by a leather thong through the padded base and a cloth strap around the neck, this way it maintains an upright position as the hunter moves through the savannah.

Sources:
1.African Masks of the Barbier Mueller Collection. Prestel Verlag Munich. 1998.
2.Masks of Black Africa. Ladislas Segy. 1976.

RETURN TO N. NIGERIAN BIRD DECOYS PAGE

GO TO BIRDS IN AFRICAN ART PAGE

GO TO ANIMALIA EXHIBITION PAGE

GO TO ANIMALS IN AFRICAN ART PAGE

GO TO ARTIFACTS PAGE

GO TO NEW ADDITIONS PAGE

HOMEPAGE

 Index by
TRIBE

 Index by
OBJECT

CONTACT US