On view

Cross-Collections Gallery

Bwiti (reliquary figure),

late 19th–20th century

Artist unidentified
Hongwe (Gabonese)
y1972-34
Elder members of Obamba and Hongwe communities commissioned these figural sculptures to go on top of containers or bundles holding the relics of influential deceased family members. The wooden figures are sheathed in pieces of brass and copper—valuable materials secured through trade with Europeans—that were scoured to gleam like the surface of a body of water. In many equatorial African societies, the realm beyond the water’s surface is associated with ancestral and supernatural forces. Reliquary ensembles placed on family altars served as agents of ancestral power and were essential for the transmission of family history and genealogy. During the period of French colonial rule (1885–1960), these figures were often removed from their ensembles and separated from the human remains contained in their bases.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
Bwiti (reliquary figure)
Dates

late 19th–20th century

Medium
Wood, copper alloy, pigment, and bone or ivory
Dimensions
58.5 cm x 27.5 cm x 8.2 cm (23 1/16 x 10 13/16 x 3 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Henry Strater, Class of 1919, Fund and an anonymous donor
Object Number
y1972-34
Place Made

Africa, Gabon

Culture
Materials

Acquired by Governor Millet near Makokou, Gabon, by 1920s; Mme. Krawitz, Paris, France; [Christian Duponcheel, Brussels, Belgium]; Jean Mestach, Paris, France; [Mathias Komor Works of Fine Art, New York, NY]; purchased by John B. Elliott, New York, NY by 1972; purchased by the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, 1972.