Details
Description
Dogon tribe granary door panel, Mali, carved wood, depicting a prominent high relief crocodile theme flanked by low relief ancestral …
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Dogon tribe granary door panel, Mali, carved wood, depicting a prominent high relief crocodile theme flanked by low relief ancestral figures and protectors, important symbolic representations that symbolize power and strength within Dogon cosmology and culture, thought to serve as protectors of the granaries and the valuable resources stored within.
Dimensions: 76" h (to hinge tips, each measures 1.5" upper, 3" lower H) x 31" W x 1.5" D.
The Dogon, subsistence farmers who hold ancient animist beliefs, are one of central Mali's ethnic groups. In the 15th century, or even earlier, perhaps fleeing a wave of Islamization, they settled along the 100-mile long Bandiagara Cliffs, which rise just above this village. The Dogon displaced the indigenous Tellem people, who had used caves and cliff dwellings as granaries and burial chambers, a practice the Dogon adopted. They built their villages on the rocky slopes below. Today, the majority of the estimated 500,000 Dogon remain purely animist (the rest are Muslims and Christians), their ancient culture based on a triumvirate of gods. Ritual art - used to connect with the spiritual world through prayer and supplication -- can still be found in caves and shrines. Dogon doors and shutters, distinctively carved and embellished with images of crocodiles, bats and sticklike human figures, adorn important village structures.
The villages of Dogon Country are among hundreds of sites across Mali that local people have plundered for cash. The pillaging feeds an insatiable overseas market for Malian antiquities, considered by European, American and Japanese art collectors to. be among the finest in Africa. The objects range from the Inland Niger Delta's delicate terra-cotta statuettes -- vestiges of three empires that controlled Saharan trade routes to Europe and the Middle East for some 600 years -- to Neolithic pottery to the carved wooden doors and human figurines made by the Dogon.
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- Dimensions
- 31ʺW × 1.5ʺD × 76ʺH
- Period
- Mid 20th Century
- Country of Origin
- Mali
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Wood
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Brown
- Condition Notes
- Very good; wear commensurate with age and use, structurally sound, light surface scratches with some rubbed high point extremities, panel … moreVery good; wear commensurate with age and use, structurally sound, light surface scratches with some rubbed high point extremities, panel shrinkage. less
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