This is the rating and price for Figure Katsina Hermaphrodite
Description : FIGURE KATSINA HERMAPHRODITE
Nigéria, culture Nok,
entre 200 avant J.C. et 200 après J.C.
Matériau
Terre cuite
H. 58,4 cm
€ 20 000 - 30 000
KATSINA/NOK SCULPTURE OF A HERMAPHRODITE
Origin: Nigeria
Circa: 200 BC to 200 AD
Medium: Terracotta
Dimension: 23'' high
Technically, they are very unusual because of the manner in which coiled and subtractive sculpting methods were used to capture likenesses. Aesthetically, they are both naturalistic and expressionist, with highly distinctive elongated forms, triangular eyes, pierced pupils/nostrils and elaborate hairstyles. Substyles of the Nok tradition include the Classical Jemaa Style, the Katsina-Ala Style (elongated heads) and the Sokoto Style (elongated monobrow foreheads, lending a severe expression to the face) and random variants such as the Herm Statues of Kuchamfa (simplified cylindrical figures topped with normal heads) and the standard three-dimensional standing figures, which subscribe to the Jemaa style. The function of the art is unclear, although the care with which they are executed has led some to claim they represent nobility, perhaps ancestors to which obeisance and sacrifices were offered. It is however
an important issue to resolve, for the Nok are believed to be a forerunner of the Ife and Benin sculptural tradition. The current specimen displays characteristics of the Katsina
style, with its plain headwear, facial characteristics and nugatory appendicular anatomy. The Katsina polity is contemporary with the Sokoto and the later Nok classical style in the early centuries of the 1st millennium AD. This date has been confirmed by independent thermoluminescence testing, which yielded a date of between 2300 +/- 460 BP, or 810BC to 160 AD (a copy of the report will be provided). Statistically, the latter is
more probable, although the full temporospatial range of the Katsina polity is far from fully understood. Socially, little is known of the Katsina owing to the paucity of controlled excavations in their presumed area of origin, although they were seemingly sedentary farmers in the generalised Iron Age tradition. The piece is built on an imposing scale, and while most Katsina pieces are designed to cap the top of large ceramic vessels,
this appears to have been made to be a freestanding figure. It is therefore something of a rarity. The general impression of the piece is one of serenity. The head, capped with a simple skullcap, is angular in design with a high domed forehead and a broad jaw narrowing to a firm chin. The eyes, unlike the triangular and drilled Nok models, are bulbous eminences with urvilinear slits and small piercings. The ears are also marked
by drilled holes. The neck is long and thick, coming down onto a more schematic and generalised body that contrasts sharply with the carefully-executed head. The arms are folded onto what appear to be poles that attach around the back of the figure. It is probable that the significance of this pose is something specific to the Katsina and unknowable to modern onlookers. Most unusually, the figure displays male and female
characteristics, which makes it one of the earliest West African hermaphrodites of which the current author is aware. As stated above, the role and function of Nok art is speculative at best, and the Katsina are even more mysterious. However, from the current piece one might make some conclusions. The size and impact of the piece makes it unlikely that it was a purely decorative or secular item. Further, the unusual sexual imagery is unlikely to have been a passé frivolity on the part of the sculptor. The fairly plain nature of the body suggests that we are not seeing the whole picture, and indeed it is likely that the figure was painted, anointed or even dressed when it was
being used by the society in which it was made. We are unlikely to know the precise details of this piece's social function, but the imposing and masterfully-modelled nature of the sculpting makes it a truly remarkable, rare and unusual masterpiece.
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Estimate (low-high) : 20000 EUR-30000 EURIt's free to register now to view!
About the lot N° 123 Title : Figure Katsina Hermaphrodite Medium : Terre cuite Marc Arthur Kohn Paris, auctioneer, Paris, FRIt's free to register now to view! Sale title : Collection Fayez Barakat, Antiques, Art Islamique, Art Préco Sale date : 23 Jun 2014It's free to register now to view! Sale Reference : Live Sale