Pictured above (from top to bottom)
Mask (lukwakongo)
Lega peoples, Democratic Republic of the Congo
19th-20th century
Wood, kaolin, raffia
H. 43.2 cm. (17 in.)
The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, gift of Lawrence Gussman, New York, to American Friends of the Israel Museum in memory of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, B97.0016
This object is associated with Bwami, a prestigious association to which all Lega men and women aspire to belong. Each grade or level of the Bwami hierarchy is identified with particular emblems that express the teachings of the society. Wooden masks like this one were never worn; instead, they were owned and displayed by male members of the second highest grade. The ivory head, another emblem of an upper-level member, features a small fiber skullcap, an important Bwami insignia. The cowrie-shell eyes suggest the heightened vision of an initiate who is in the process of moving to a higher level of Bwami.
Lega man wearing the hat and necklace of a Bwami society elder, near Kalima, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Photograph by Eliot Elisofon, 1966
Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, National Museum of African Art
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