The Temple of Africa
Kota reliquary guardian figure,
from Gabon, West Africa.
Welcome to the Temple of Africa, the
Mother of Humanity and the archaic home
of Tantra tradition. Tantric practices
are found in most ancient spiritual
belief systems. Unfortunately, with
the advent of Christian missionary activity,
many of the places where archaic forms
of Tantra were once practiced, now have
only traces of this knowledge. Africa
is the best example of this phenomena.
Africa, the "home" of humanity, the
original motherland. Look closely at
traditional African spiritual cultures,
such as the Dogon of Mali, the Fang
and Kota of Gabon and the Yoruba of
Nigeria, and traces of Tantra become
apparent. Belief in reincarnation, in
the immortality of the human spirit,
the spiritual law of "cause and effect,"
divination, spirit possession, meditation,
mystic power phrases, spells and amulets,
the power of sacrifice and the sacraments
of sex are but some of the tenets common
to both the African and Asian archaic
spiritual traditions.
DOGON, FANG AND ARCHAIC TANTRA
The Dogon of Mali and the Fang of Gabon
are African tribes that have preserved
archaic Tantric concepts to the present
time, especially in sculptured objects
of wood. This is an aspect of art history
that has been much neglected. For this
reason we share important items of Dogon
and Fang sacred sculpture by placing
them in the Temple of Africa on this
World Wide Web site.
In the catalog to "Africa: The Art
of a Continent," an important exhibit
held recently at London's Royal Academy
of Art and at New York's Guggenheim
Museum, Daniel Biebuyck writes:
"Among the religious beliefs and practices
that require the use of sculpture are
the care and veneration of the dead,
concerns about the destiny of the soul
and life principles, ancestral cults,
worship of nature spirits, divination
and detection of evil-doers and witches,
healing techniques, methods of inflicting
and neutralizing evil and sickness,
consolidation of friendship and blood-pacts,
taking of oaths, personal and group
protection and the enhancement of fertility."
DOGON SACRED WOOD SCULPTURE FROM MALI
The Dogon of Mali number about 250,000
people today. Their home is the Bandiagara
Escarpment, a row of steep cliffs some
almost 2,000 feet high, stretching 125
miles from Southwest to Northeast, parallel
to the Niger River. The region inhabited
by the Dogon is one of the few areas
in Africa that had no contact with the
West until the end of the 19th century.
Dogon statuary is among the most discussed
and least understood in Africa. It is
largely expressive of cosmology, myth
and spiritual rites.
Dogon wood sculptures are among the
oldest known spiritual art objects from
Africa. Radiocarbon tests done on a
number of Dogon wood sculptures have
produced some astonishing results, the
most archaic thus far being a statue
1850 years old (plus or minus 200 years).
A few test results are in the 1000 to
1300 year age-range, several in the
400-600 year age-range and many are
200-300 years old.
A Dogon myth tells how, after the world's
creation, 'Amma' sacrificed one of the
'Nommo' ancestors to the sky and two
trees were born from the blood. Parts
of the body were thrown to the four
cardinal directions, and to the earth
and sky, each part becoming trees. According
to a study by Dieterlen:
"Trees belonged to 22 families, each
corresponding to a part of the human
body and to a moment of the (primordial)
myth."
"Pelu" (khaya senegalensis) was the
most commonly used hardwood for Dogon
statues, even though it is very fibrous
and extremely difficult to carve.
A LARGE SEATED DOGON HERMAPHRODITE
FIGURE


One of the most important Dogon sculptures
that have survived is a large seated
"hermaphrodite" figure carved from a
very hard and heavy fibrous wood. It
is shown here in public for the first
time. This is much larger, finer and
earlier than any previously recorded
examples, the best of which are generally
attributed to the 17th/18th century.
- Height: 45.5 inches (115.57
cms)
- Period: before the 17th century.
This large and impressive Dogon hermaphrodite
figure is in excellent condition, with
a simple (rejoined) break at the ladle.
The wood surface has an exquisite natural
encrusted patina, including remains
of sacrificial offerings.
This hermaphrodite figure is carved
in a stylized "abstracted" manner, in
the style known as "Bombu-Toro" after
an area where sculptures in this style
have been found. The long columnar body
has an elongated neck and arms, prominent
breasts and foreshortened legs. The
figure is naked except for armlets and
bracelets, and has a large helmet-like
head with a crested plaited hair ridge
and side coifs ornamented with engraved
cross-hatch motifs. The eyes are diamond-shaped,
the nose long, mouth open and diamond-shaped,
with tab-beard or lip-plug below. The
sides of the mouth are linked to the
side hair-coifs, representing a mustache.
Zig-zag shaped cross-hatched markings
are on the sides of the face.
The figure holds a large ladle with
both hands and has a quiver attached
to the back. In Dogon iconography, the
calabash ladle (kozu) or "ceremonial
spoon" signifies "a matriarch or woman
of importance"; the quiver is the symbol
of "an illustrious man."
According to Hélène Leloup,
writing in her definitive work "Dogon
Statuary":
"Mythical beings symbolize the human
ideal (warrior attributes for men; procreation
for women)...The calabash with the long
handle is the women's insignia (kozu)
used to accompany the songs in rituals
such as the one for lifting the period
of mourning for important people."
The figure sits in a formal frontal
posture with legs apart, "above" a stool
formed by two irregular disc-like sections
supported by small standing "caryatid"
figures. Leloup explains the symbolism:
"Among the most spectacular sculptures
we find the mysterious hermaphrodites.
To understand these statues, one must
clarify the Dogon concept of perfection
deriving from the re-union of what was
separated. For young initiates, these
statues explained the necessity of the
dualism existing in nature, the social
differentiation between men and women,
the distinction between the sexes -
dualism one had to transgress in order
to attain perfection and continuity
in life. We have here the illustration
of a typical Dogon concept: the male
contains the female who also contains
the male....
These atypical beings are said to represent
the 'eight primordial ancestors, born
of the couple fashioned by God (who)
could inseminate themselves, each being
double and of both sexes' (Griaule,
1948)."
She continues:
"These monoxyle statues are seated
in a chiefly position on a stool carved
in the image of the world. The two discs
are connected by a central axis surrounded
by caryatids. The bottom disc represents
the earth and the top represents the
sky. The disc representing the sky cannot
seat any man, no matter how powerful.
Note that the sculptor marks the separation
between human beings and the stool by
attaching the figure to the central
axis; the thighs and buttocks do not
actually touch the stool."
In her major work, Leloup illustrates
four similar hermaphrodite figures,
between 69 and 80.5 cms in height, including
the best known and most similar but
smaller "Bombu-Toro" hermaphrodite figure
(height 69 cms) formerly owned by the
sculptor Jacob Epstein. She also refers
to other similar sculptures:
"Which represent a seated woman on
a stool with caryatids; she is holding
a spoon and carries a child on her back
instead of a quiver. These statues have
protuberant breasts, the female sex
is not always indicated, and the chin
is decorated with a lip plug. It was
called yomasaye and supposedly represented
the big, all-powerful sister, healer
and witch, holding the spoon of the
ya-sigine....."
As with many other ancient African
cultures, Dogon sculpture, masks and
metalwork are made by blacksmiths. The
sculptures are carved in green wood.
Leloup gives the following fascinating
account of the process of wood selection,
acquisition and carving:
"The blacksmith carefully selects a
tree, which must be located east of
the new moon's first crescent. On the
new moon's first day, he sacrifices
a chicken whose blood is poured on the
tree mixed with kola, in order to placate
the tree's nyama. The branch is then
chopped off, covered in sa to prevent
drying, then in the leftover blood,
and it is left in situ for a week. At
the end of the week (on a Monday or
Thursday), the sculptor starts roughing
down the log......"
Such traditions of wood selection and
carving from green wood are common to
both African and Indian archaic traditions.
This highly important African sculpture
is available to a qualified purchaser.
For more information please
send e-mail.
ABOUT FANG SCULPTURE FROM GABON
Fang sculpture from Gabon, especially
the "reliquary" heads and figures, are
associated with an ancestor cult referred
to as "byeri." The term byeri refers
to both the solo heads or figures which
guard the funerary relics - craniums
and bones - of important ancestors.
Byeri sculptures were mounted on the
top of bark boxes, baskets or bundles
containing human relics. They were consulted
before undertaking any important action,
such as an important journey, a battle,
the placement of a village or house,
finding a wife, choice of ground for
agriculture, curing of sickness and
before starting a hunt.
The most thorough study of Fang art
and culture was done by the French scholar
Louis Perrois. Between 1965 and 1975
he lived in Gabon, researching and publishing
on the Fang and related tribes. His
thesis "La Statuaire Fang, Gabon" (Paris,
1972) is the definitive work on the
subject. In 1992 he curated the definitive
exhibition of Fang sculpture at the
Marseille Museum, bringing together
some 60 fine examples.
Perrois estimates between 500 and 600
genuine traditional Fang sculptures
exist in collections and museums throughout
the world. In his thesis he documents
272 of them, of which about 40 are solo
heads. Writing in the Fang section in
the catalog of the major exhibition
"Africa: The Art of a Continent", which
opened at London's Royal Academy of
Arts in October 1995 and at New York's
Guggenheim Museum in June 1996, Perrois
speculates that Fang carvings are perhaps
the culmination of a long tradition:
"The delicacy of these carvings continues
to surprise; they were produced in a
village environment by people who had
been constantly on the move since the
beginning of the 19th century. This
makes one wonder if the Fang statuary
first discovered at the end of the 19th
century is not the culmination of a
long tradition, dating back to before
the last migration of groups from the
Eastern savannas of Cameroon and Central
Africa."
Fang wood sculptors commonly also worked
with metal and came from long established
lineage's of sacred object makers. Wood
used for carving Fang reliquary statues
was carefully selected and worked only
by artisans who were ceremonially "purified,"
who followed certain ritual procedures
and who abstained from sex during the
period of fabrication.
Following the completion of the sculptural
process, a Fang byeri image was darkened
and immersed in various medicinal or
"magical" oils for several weeks, which
"nourished" and "empowered" it. Palm
oil, copal resins, black coloration
(mevina) and other substances created
the unique patina of Fang sculpture,
which was further enhanced by sacrificial
oblations.
Byeri were generally consulted after
the use of narcotic plant products.
"Alan," also known as "malan," is the
main drug used by initiates into the
byeri cult. According to J. Fernandez,
"the root of the alan bush is ground
up, powdered, dried and consumed while
sitting exposed to the morning and midday
sun." Fernandez says the purpose of
this drug's use is to "break open the
head (akwia nlo)," so as to connect
with the spiritual realms. Alan reputedly
has hallucinogenic, stimulating and
aphrodisiac properties. Fernandez did
an extensive study of drug use among
the Fang and related tribes. He documents
the use of four types of narcotics that
"enter into their cult rituals." These
are "alan" - Alchornea floribunda; "eboka"
- Tabernanthe iboga, which has ibogaine
as its main alkaloid; "ayan beyem" -
Elaeophorbia drupifera; and "beyama"
- Cannabis .
Fernandez writes that "the latex of
ayan beyem was employed in the ancestral
cult among the Fang when the ingestion
of malan was slow in showing effect.
A parrot's red tail feather dipped in
the mixture was brushed across the eyeballs.
The latex appears to affect the optical
nerves, producing bizarre visual states."
He also writes that cults in Southern
Gabon mix malan with eboka. Fernandez
gives a lot of data on the connected
bwiti cult which primarily uses the
drug eboka. Followed mainly by the interrelated
Tsogo or "Mitsogho" tribe of Gabon,
according to him this is "a night cult
of the female principle of the universe."
TWO IMPORTANT FANG SCULPTURES FROM
GABON
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Fang Byeri:
Reliquary Guardian Head
mounted on the top of a Reliquary
Basket, intact with Fetish Bundles
including a central monkey skull,
shells and animal horns.
Carved from wood, with surface
blackish in color, this "nlo byeri"
head has a heart-shaped face,
parallel scarification or tattoo
marks from crown to tip of the
nose, and eyes done with brass
pins. Orange colored raffia "hair"
is attached to the top of the
head.
- Height of Head: 11.5
inches (29.2 cms)
- Height on Basket: 18.25
inches
A fine original patina from ceremonial
offerings covers the surface of
the head and the basketry. Several
documented Fang heads show similar
double-line facial markings. This
is the only known example recovered
intact, on a basket-top together
with relics. |
Fang Byeri: Rare Four-headed Male
Reliquary Figure.
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The eyes of each face are
minute ceramic beads inset below
the brows. Shoulders, front
and back, are modeled in a stylized
way. The carving is extremely
fine and the patination layered
and rich.
Height: 13 inches (33
cms).
This exquisite Fang byeri sculpture
is of a male, legs bent in the
normal posture, both hands brought
together above a disc-shaped
navel. What is most unusual
is that this figure has four
heads, each with chiseled nose
and mouth slit-like, slightly
open. The faces are classical
Fang, ovoid in shape and with
a single central "crest-knob".
Perrois refers to only three
multi-headed Fang sculptures
in his major publications. In
his thesis he illustrates and
describes two and in his more
recent art publication, "Byeri
Fang: Sculptures d'Ancetres
en Afrique" (1992), he illustrates
and describes another fine multi-headed
Fang sculpture, a byeri torso
with three faces, from Northern
Gabon.
These important Fang sculptures
from Gabon are available to
qualified purchasers. |
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