Description
This headpost (baàthíl) was likely a temporary sanctuary for khélé, a harmful spirit released after killing a person or dangerous animal. Around 1900, members of the Milkuùr religious association used baàthíla to counteract khélé. While the head resembles that of a teenage girl with pierced upper lip and earlobes, the roughly hewn, pole-like bottom suggests otherwise. Buried in an altar, devotees ritually applied materials that darkened the exposed head. When the owner died, the khélé left the sculpture; no longer sacred, it was buried. Milkuùr’s strict rules ensure these objects are made from the appropriate wood and that artists’ names remain secret.
Provenance
(Mathias Komor, New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (by at least 1967); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1967-)
Accession Number
1967.152
Medium
Wood and organic materials
Dimensions
Overall: 63.6 cm (25 1/16 in.)
Classification
Sculpture
Credit Line
Gift in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Coe from various donors