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Born from the heart of the Kuba Kingdom in the Kasai region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, this extraordinary ceremonial mask is a testament to one of Central Africa's most sophisticated artistic traditions. The Kuba people — renowned across the continent for their mastery of geometric design — covered every surface of this mask in the hallmark ibol pattern: a dense, hypnotic tessellation of black and white triangles that symbolises the boundary between the living world and the realm of ancestors.
The central face emerges from this geometric field with quiet authority — closed eyes painted in ochre and white, a dark black mouth set in solemn expression, and a striking blue bead at the forehead representing divine sight and spiritual vision. Diagonal orange-red bands radiate outward from the face like rays of a ceremonial sun, a motif associated with royalty and the Kuba king, the Nyim.
Carved from a single piece of hardwood and finished with natural pigments — red ochre, kaolin white, charcoal black, and cobalt — this mask was traditionally worn during royal initiation ceremonies, funerary rites, and dances celebrating the founding myths of the Kuba people. Each viewing angle reveals new detail, new rhythm, new meaning.
A museum-calibre centrepiece. A conversation that spans centuries.
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