Description
The name given to masks like this, mbap mteng, means "animal with huge ears." In the Cameroon Grassfields kingdoms, the elephant signifies power, authority, prestige, and leadership. The colorful glass beads that decorate the mask’s surface were imported from Venice and Bohemia (in Europe) and signal wealth and prosperity. Its geometric patterns include triangles that evoke the leopard, another animal linked with royal power. Members of Kuosi, an elite male society, wore such elephant masks for ritual dances and funerary ceremonies. This mask would have been worn with a costume that included a feather headdress
Provenance
L. Kahan Gallery Inc., New York. (?–1985); The Cleveland Museum of Art by purchase (1985–)
Accession Number
1985.1082
Medium
Cotton, burlap, glass beads, twine, leather, and wood
Dimensions
Overall: 139.7 x 50.8 x 19.1 cm (55 x 20 x 7 1/2 in.)
Classification
Mask
Credit Line
The Harold T. Clark Educational Extension Fund