Vintage Ancestor Spirit Mask Indonesia, East Timor (1210YKM) CALL FOR AVAILABILITY 213-568-3030

$325.00

H: 12.25″ W: 8.5″ D: 2.25″ |  CALL FOR AVAILABILiTY

Timor masks are rare, intense, characterized by large roughly cut eyes and sometimes have no teeth. This one is not completely black from being stored in house rafters and also has no animal hide with hair attached to it. Its surface has darkened unevenly and there are white bits of white especially on the front. Threatening due to its lack of teeth, asymmetrical eyes and their  lack of balance, ancestral masks are used in offering rituals designed to drive off malevolent spirits, scare enemies and perform ritual ceremonies and war celebrations.

Additional Information: This rare vintag

Description

This rare ancestor mask is from East Timor, Indonesia. Religion there has been characterized by Barbier as ritual exchanges between individuals or social groups with ancestral and fertility spirits and having a close reciprocal link between the deceased and the secular world: ancestors require sustenance, respect and attention while humans seek advice, good fortune, health and offspring. Carved masks are a form of ancestor worship used in ritual offerings for the departed to occupy and have a place to rest during village visits. Household ceremonies are performed in a room called “the womb” where beams rising to the roof struts and function symbolically as an axis mundi. Meaning “pillar of the world”, an axis mundi is a tree, mountain or any tall object that literally or figuratively connects the earthly realm directly to heaven. It is the cosmic center of the world and a conduit to ancestor spirits and ghosts watching over the house. Masks are protective and magic objects connected to animism and shamanism and used throughout Indonesian island art in what Barbier brilliantly called “the ritual manipulation of fate.” Considered tribal, ethic and folk art, most masks are ancestor spirits made to honor one’s ancestors and to receive their protection and guidance. Timorese masks were rarely seen in the West or even in Bali until the mid-1970s, but by the 1980s Javanese influences were noted in the treatment of the face, teeth and eyes. Collected in Bali in the 1970s, its left inside corner was chipped during its shipment here and not seen when hung on a wall. Otherwise its condition is very good with signs of age and use.

Click here for the blog Indonesian Dance Masks (Topeng): Spiritually Connecting the Community

Sources

Jean Paul Barbier, Indonesian Primitive Art: Indonesia, Malaysia, The Philippines from the Collection of the Barbier-Müller Museum, Geneva, Dallas, Dallas Museum of Art, 1984.

 

Additional information

Dimensions 16 × 12 × 8 in
Place of Origin

Indonesia

Period

Vintage (1920-1980)

Date

1930-1950

Dimensions (inches)

Ht: 12.25”, W: 8.5” D: 2.25”

Dimensions (metric)

Ht: 31.11cm W: 21.59cm D: 5.71cm

Condition

Good condition, see description

Item Number

1210YKM

Shipping Box Size