Helmet Mask (Moshambwooy)
Artist/Maker
Bushoong people
(Kuba Kingdom, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Date20th century
Mediumraffia, cotton, dye, wood, glass beads, parrot feathers, cowrie shells, monkey hair, hide and leopard fur
DimensionsOverall: 31 1/2 x 30 x 9 7/8 in. (80 x 76.2 x 25.1 cm)
ClassificationsCostumes and Accessories
Credit LineMuseum purchase through the 2005 Director's Circle, the Linnie E. Dalbeck Memorial Endowment Fund and the Lowe Art Museum Acquisitions Fund in honor of Dr. Marcilene Wittmer
Terms
Object number2005.5.1
DescriptionAccording to tradition, Moshambwooy symbolizes Woot, the founder of the Kuba. Among the various groups that comprise the Kuba Kingdom, the Bushoong people provide the king, Nyimi, and it is their royal masks that represent the ideal dramatization of the legend of the founding of the Kuba and the establishment of the Kingdom. The female mask, Nganga Ntshemi, represents the ideal beautiful woman and sister/wife of the king, Moshambwooy. She also represents the practice of divination associated with royal women among a number of Central African peoples. Bwoom represents a primeval antagonist of the Kuba king, possibly modeled on the indigenous Pygmy people, who challenged the rule of Moshambwooy. The Moshambwooy mask is rare in American and European collections. More familiar is a provincial Kuba variation with a stylized elephant trunk and correctly known as Mukyeem or Mukenga.On View
Not on viewCollections