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Nursing mother. Dogon Maternity Bronze Figure Mali 1990-2000

Breastfeeding mother. Dogon Motherhood, Maternity.

Dimensions: 105 x 26 x 22 mm, 72 g.

SectionSculptures
MaterialBronze
ContinentAfrica
CountryMali
Year1990-2000

Estatua dogon procedente del Kamablon de la aldea de Tireli.
Los dogones, al igual que otras etnias de África, representan con frecuencia la maternidad en el arte en forma de mujeres con grades pechos amamantando, sea en madera tallada, sea en bronce a la cera perdida, marfil, piedra o terracota. El estilo Dogon es reconocible por la nariz en punta de flecha, la prolongación del mentón y una pequeña coleta

Los dogones son agricultores de religión tradicional que viven en el sur de Mali (medio millón, 5% de la población) y de Burkina Faso (150.000, 1,5% de la población).

The theme of motherhood is universal and recurrent in art throughout black Africa. African maternity statues do not usually express the emotional bonds between mother and child, as they symbolise the fertility of women and the earth, belong to the domain of the sacred and are often displayed on an altar. The mothers are in a hieratic position, very well sculpted, while the child, often a small adult, is barely sketched, especially the body, and there are almost never any glances between mother and child.

In many African ethnicities, the left side of the body is associated with the sacred: in most black African maternity wards, the child is positioned to the left of the mother or suckling from the left breast.

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Estatua dogon procedente del Kamablon de la aldea de Tireli.
Los dogones, al igual que otras etnias de África, representan con frecuencia la maternidad en el arte en forma de mujeres con grades pechos amamantando, sea en madera tallada, sea en bronce a la cera perdida, marfil, piedra o terracota. El estilo Dogon es reconocible por la nariz en punta de flecha, la prolongación del mentón y una pequeña coleta

Los dogones son agricultores de religión tradicional que viven en el sur de Mali (medio millón, 5% de la población) y de Burkina Faso (150.000, 1,5% de la población).

The theme of motherhood is universal and recurrent in art throughout black Africa. African maternity statues do not usually express the emotional bonds between mother and child, as they symbolise the fertility of women and the earth, belong to the domain of the sacred and are often displayed on an altar. The mothers are in a hieratic position, very well sculpted, while the child, often a small adult, is barely sketched, especially the body, and there are almost never any glances between mother and child.

In many African ethnicities, the left side of the body is associated with the sacred: in most black African maternity wards, the child is positioned to the left of the mother or suckling from the left breast.