Owner: HWMC
Catalog#: AF-IDST-089-14
Provenance: Marius Cipolla – African Tribal Art – Pinetown, South Africa
Bells, Metal
Kota 'Reliquary' Bell
Gabon (Upper Ogowe)
Kota-Mindumu/Ondumbo
Iron – brass -wood – cowrie shells – fabric
Early-Mid 20th century
Height: 32 inches x Width: 22 inches x Depth: 6 inches
Idiophone – Struck Directly – Double Bell, Metal
Like many tribes of Africa, the traditions and religion of the Kota is focused upon the ancestors. They believe the skulls and bones of their past chiefs have power over the well-being of the village in the afterlife. Wooden sculptures covered with sheets of copper and brass, known as reliquary or guardian figures are attached to objects that deal with and connects to the ancestors, such as this double bell. Some argue that these figures are an abstract of the deceased individual, while others say they guard and protect the chief’s spirit. Nevertheless, the bones, themselves were sacred and not the wooden objects covered with metal, thus there was no contraction problems with selling these objects for profit to art dealers.