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The following information © relates
to the exhibition Face of the Gods, conceived by Robert Farris Thompson,
professor of Afro-American Art at Yale University and curator of The
Museum of African Art in New York City, where this traveling show originated.
The exhibition links the visual grammar of altar traditions of West
African (Yoruba) and Central African (Kongo) civilizations with those
of Yoruba and Kongo descendants in Haiti, Cuba, Brazil, Puerto Rico
and in Black and Latino North America. Face of the Gods can be seen
up to February 19 at University Art Museum, Berkeley and March 19-May
4 at The Museum of Fine Arts, Alabama.
Altars everywhere are sites of
ritual communication with the supernatural. They mark the boundary between
heaven and earth, the living and the dead, the ordinary and the world
of the spirit. Elevated or grounded, simple or elaborate, communal or
personal, altars focus the faithful in worship. They provide an arena
for offerings and requests they act to channel positive and negative
forces. The Yoruba term for altar, "face of the gods," and the Kongo
concept of altar as a "crossroads" or border between worlds, are the
operative metaphors used throughout the exhibition.
Using the altar as a vehicle for
historical reconstruction, the exhibition explores how, despite the
destruction and disruption caused by the slave trade and the imposition
of Christianity and foreign culture, African people and their descendants
in the Americas maintained the essential elements of African religious
traditions through improvisations and adaptations to local context.
Face of the Gods presents approximately
18 altars made up of more than one hundred examples of African and African
American works of art. Some of the altars are reconstructions, based
on field photos, using loan objects from altar artists, national and
international museums, and private collectors. Altars have also been
installed with the assistance of distinguished artists/traditional leaders
like José Bedia of Cuba, Balbino de Paula from Brazil, Felipe García
Villamil of Cuba (now in the Bronx), K. Kia Bunseki Fu-Kiau of Zaire,
John Mason, Yoruba priest from Brooklyn, Amira Lepore and her son, Anadeau,
Umbanda specialist from New York City, Alberto Morgan, Yoruba specialist
from New Jersey and C. Daniel Dawson, special curator consultant.
Prelude: Kongo syncretism Face of
the Gods begins outside the museum where Palo Mayombe ground-drawing,
or firmas, have been applied to the pavement. Palo (stick in Spanish)
is a Kongo-based religion in Cuba; Mayombe, a location in Western Zaire.
These signs are considered the signatures of spiritual entities associated
with the Palo religion. Drawn on chalk or sometimes gunpowder, they
are used to attract and incorporate those powers for protection and
health.
A procession of multicolored, sequined
flags dedicated to the Haitian deities of sevi lwa, commonly known as
Voudou, lead the visitor. This national religion is composed of many
strands: from Dahomey came the worship of a pantheon of gods and goddesses
(called lwa) under one supreme Creator; from Kongo and Angola beliefs
in the transcendental powers of the dead and in the effectiveness of
minkisi (charms used for the healing and social harmony); from Yorubaland
a pantheon of deities (orisha). In Haiti these flags are paraded at
the beginning of ceremonies to herald the coming of a god or goddess.
They are flags of mediation between our mundane world and the world
of the lwa and represent a Creole variation on the Kongo theme of the
ritual dancing of the cloth.
Yoruba Gods and their Emblems The
Yoruba, one of Sub-Saharan Africa's most populous groups, sixteen million
strong, live in the Republic of Nigeria. They are heirs to an ancient
culture exceptional for its urban density, refinement and complexity.
When forced migration took Yoruba peoples to the plantations of Cuba,
Brazil and Haiti, they recombined their deities into a new pantheon
and incorporated Catholic saints whose powers and histories seemed parallel.
For example, some representations of the Virgin Mary were equated with
the sweet and gentle aspect of Oshun, the goddess of love. In Cuba,
Shango, the Yoruba thunder god, was frequently associated with martyred
Saint Barbara, because her assassins were struck dead by lightning.
The icons associated with the deities were also translated into American
equivalents -- the ritual swords of Ogun, the Yoruba god of iron, became
identified with St. Peter's iron key to heaven. While outwardly conforming
to the religious practices of the Catholics surrounding them, the Yoruba
in Cuba and Brazil maintained a system of thought that creatively reorganized
their traditional religions to survive in a new environment.
The first altar is of Afro-Brazilian
Yoruba tradition and dedicated to Obatala/Oxala, a saint among saints,
sweet, pure and merciful, whose color white stands for honesty and truth.
To denote unblemished honesty, this throne altar uses transparent white
fabric draped and tied in an enormous bow, staffs of white metals, tin
and silver, a beaded crown, cement columns studded with silver painted
stones, scepters and swords. Crosses and candles denote syncretic borrowing
of Catholic saints and symbols: Obatala is most often compared to Jesus.
On an adjacent wall is a Nigerian Yoruba crown covered with white beads.
These altars introduce Yoruba religious
iconography with sculptures for the deities or orisha of the large Yoruba
pantheon. Each orisha oversees a particular realm of the moral universe
and has his or her own visual signature, made up of characteristic colors,
icons, fabrics, symbols and foods. The first altar illustrates how these
sculptures were often assembled in Africa. Based on early-20th century
photographs of shrines from the Oyo region of Nigeria a traditional
altar to Shango, the fourth king of the Yoruba, now immortalized as
the thunder god, has been recreated. He is represented by the oshe,
a double headed axe, a symbol of balance, and the fiery color red. As
the regulator of rules, Shango reminds practitioners not to lose control;
doubleness also relates to Shango's children, the Ibeji or Spirit Twins.
Symbols of his power - calabashes, crowns of beads, thunder rattles,
as well as the Oshe Shango double-headed axe - announce his presence
and message of God's moral judgment.
With these works of art as a point
of reference, the extensive visual vocabulary of the Yoruba worship
in Africa is juxtaposed to that of a Yoruba-influenced Afro-Cuban altar
where the enduring impact of these ancestral forms is clearly revealed.
While the emblems vary and change with inventive Creole energy, they
nevertheless span three continents and many centuries with remarkable
consistency.
An opulent Afro-Cuba throne altar
shows six orisha elevated and arranged on individual platforms and decorated
with their appropriate colors. As Thompson writes, "in the richness
of these shrine elaborations, Yoruba people experience a sense of heaven's
glamour." Surrounded by canopies and thrones, multi-stranded necklaces
of beads (mazos) dress these deities who appear as mysterious mounds
of richly draped cloth over tureens containing sacred stones. In the
creolization process, human figures were frequently abstracted of de-anthropomorphized
by Africans in the Americans who may have been trying to protect their
religion in the midst of a hostile environment. By rendering traditional
icons as non-figurative, they became enigmatic and could not be attacked
as "heathen dolls." Recalling the crack of his thunder is a baseball
bat that has been covered with beads in Shango's red and white, red
indicating the flash of his lighting and white his controlling calm
and purity of character.
Symbolic assemblages: the Kongo
Atlantic Altar It is estimated that approximately 40% of the millions
of Africans who landed in the Americas between 1500 to 1870 were from
Central Africa, culturally influenced by the Kongo civilization. Thus
Kongo traditions are pervasive in the Americas. Kongo beliefs and iconography
are based on sacred protective medicines, minkisi, which are used for
physical and social harmony and healing. Altars are found at river banks,
in forests and cemeteries, and at other borders between worlds. They
are often surrounded by pottery, ideographic writing and sacred medicines.
The cyclical evolution of the soul that keeps transforming and returning
is crucial to understanding Kongo iconography. A dramatic and heavily
coded continuation of Kongo beliefs and icons occurs in the Southern
United States, where Kongo-American versions of the nkisi (singular
of minkisi), or medicines of the gods, take characteristic forms.
A tree with bottles protects the
household through the power of medicinal waters and a yard "dressed"
to protect it from negative intrusion. The bottles of glass or plastic
hang from a tree close to the home, protecting it from harmful spirits
by the gleam of the glass, which attracts, captures, and disempowers
evil forces like envy, jealousy and strife. The custom was recorded
in Angola as early as 1776 and in the Americas as early as 1791. An
African antecedent to the bottle tree is found in the plate and branch
tradition of adorning graves, documented in a Kongo cemetery in 1909.
Porcelain plates, pierced through the center with tree branches reappear
in grave sites in the South where they celebrate the dead. Bottle trees
may also appear as part of a full yard show.
A yard show by Cornelius of Tidewater,
Virginia, recreated in the exhibition, is presented as an environmental
Kongo-American nkisi. What might look like assemblage of junk, or meaningless
clutter is actually "a complex spiritual act in plural dimension." We
see a house surrounded by bottles filled with different colored water.
These "medicines" encircle the house, keep out evil "dogs," and are
viewed as spiritual protection for the home. The other elements in the
carefully configured yard shows -- fan blades, TV cathodes, twin dolls,
tire planters, mirrors, chairs and gates -- are decoded in terms of
Kongo iconography symbols. They are used to protect and entertain, commemorate
and enthrone, filter and repel the powers of good and evil. These assemblages,
composed of objects that symbolize motion, with white vessels and unusual
wood formations, are interpreted as altars or "visual prayers." The
theme is continued in the sequined bottles and "pacquets congo" used
by Haitian ritual experts - in reality a Caribbean manifestation of
Kongo minkisi, portable altars charged with flash and power.
Flag altars to the ancestors: Two
of the largest, most majestic altars in the exhibition are flag altars
from the rain forest of Suriname, South America. Created by African
maroon societies composed of self-liberated former slaves, and free
Africans, these altars mix fragments of the art and architecture from
the Mande, Akan and Fon/Ewe West African traditions, constantly reinvigorated
by new arrivals, and by contact with the Amerindian population. Political
and cultural resistance and independence are asserted by these distinctive
maroon altars of the Mande diaspora.
The Ndjuka altar is a 12 foot tall
T-cross with layers of white sheeting suspended from its elevation.
This altar is dedicated to the ancestors and elders. The worship here
is performed on behalf of the whole community. The single largest item
in the exhibition, the Samara altar, also from Suriname, is a stately,
evocative assembly of seven T-crosses bearing along swaths of draped
and tied cloth. These flag altars are placed within an enclosure, decorated
with palm fronds, white sand, and a place for offerings.
In Africa, the Mande made forked
branch and clay pillar altars, which mimed the verticality of trees
in their basic upholding gesture, supporting a vessel of medicine. The
tree becomes a "spiritual ideogram," and the flag altar is an African
American form of tree or tree-surrogate altar.
The circling of the soul and Kongo
medicines of God: Links are made between Afro-Cuban art and altars and
their antecedent Kongo minkisi, portable sacred medicines of god, often
called healing charms. In Africa, minkisi are kept in containers as
diverse as shells, packets, ceramic vessel, wooden images, statuettes
and cloth bundles. The most compelling Kongo minkisi are nail covered
figures used for oathtaking and healing. In addition to their fierce
attitude and covering of protruding blades and nails, these figures
also contain powerful ingredients in the head and stomach cavities.
Placed in isolated rooms, corners,
or crossroads, adorned with feathers, stones, sticks, beads, earth and
iron reflecting a symbolic language of meaning, the altars in this gallery
illustrate the symbols of Kongo religion in Cuba. The Guanabacoa nkisi,
named for a cemetery across the harbor from Havana, is a simple altar
made of a mound of earth, a small cross, a seashell and erect and bent
sticks, eloquently positioned. Two Sarabanda nkisi are present in this
exhibit - some scholars say that one of them represents the Creole spirit
of a powerful black man who worked on the railways in the last century.
Modeled on his personal altar, Cuban
José Bedia creates a symbolic environment in a corner (which represents
a crossroads) for the Lucero of Guanabacoa. The Kongo cycle-of-the-soul
is represented by a wall painting: one side black and containing the
symbols of night (moon, stars and comets); the other side blue, with
a radiant sun, for the beginning and renewal of life. On the ground
in the center of the altar and created out of a large seashell is Lucero
del Mundo, this one also known as the Lucero de Guanabacoa. It is a
guardiero, which means squire, assistant and guardian in the symbolic
language of Kongo religion of Cuba. Lucero is mounted in concrete and
surrounded by sticks and feathers that bring power. On the left is a
statue of Francisco, a Kongo guide, and on the right is a statue of
La Comisión India, and Indian guide. There is also a mbele (machete)
and a large lungoa (hooked stick) symbolizing important aspects of Palo
Monte.
Felipe García Villamil, originally
from Matanzas, Cuba, is a direct descendant of Yoruba and Kongo priests.
He is a distinguished mayombero (priest), master musician and ritual
artist. García Villamil prepared an altar for the Sarabanda in the Matanzas
style. Located in his closet, like other Kongo altars secreted in enclosures,
it is full of powerful medicines. There, two straw hats hang in readiness
for the use by the spirit, with a mirror-stoppered cow horn of clairvoyance
(vititi mensu), musical instruments used in sacred ritual, and elaborate
beaded artwork. A red flag with protective signs hangs on the wall behind
the nkisi to protect the altar, its owner and his family from harm.
The basic Kongo cosmogram is a cross
within a circle, dikenga, that is a symbolic chart of the voyage of
the soul. As a miniature of the sun, the soul is thought to have four
moments -- birth, efflorescence, fading and the return in the dawn of
a coming day. Triangles, diamonds, spirals, or crisscrosses denote this
cyclical movement. The soul, which is thought by the Bakongo to reside
in the forehead, is often represented in diamond form and can be seen
on many African masks. The exhibition includes such masks -- 19th century
Punu, Teke (Tsaaye), and Chokwe masks, and a 20th century Vili mask
ringed with feathers. In addition, a fully feathered Mardi gras "Wild
Man" costume from New Orleans, reminiscent of Kongo feather masks and
headdresses worn by healers, is a living example of the creolized Kongo
traditions found in the United States.
Fusion faiths: medicines of concern
Altars are often the locus of healing and moral reckoning and the four
altars in this section demonstrate the explosion of forms and symbols
inspired by the Yoruba art and belief in Brazil, which have fused into
Umbanda, the largest black religion in Brazil.
An altar for Omolu (another name
for Obaluaiye), the deity of pestilence, fever and epidemic, the bearer
of moral retribution, is recreated by the Pai Balbino de Paula, one
of Brazil's most distinguished Candomble priests. Earthenware bowls
contain vessels with perforated domes. Placed in the holes are wrought
iron staffs of Osanyin, the god of herbal healing. Overturned vessels
at the front of the altar commemorate the recent death of a follower.
Used to honor the good who punishes with small pox, this Omolu altar
is now also associated with scourge of AIDS. An Osanyin staff from the
Nigeria, which served as the prototype for this Brazilian Yoruba variation,
stands nearby.
The same Yoruba vocabulary is evident
in a small, portable basket altar to Asohin, an avatar of Obaluaiye,
from Puerto Rico. It contains his broom, which sweeps disease around
the world, and earthenware vessel holding his stones, a dish with perforations
(pestilence), spotted feathers of the Guinea hen, and the figure of
St. Lazarus, the saint most often syncretized with Obaluaiye.
Umbanda, devoted to charity and
mental healing, is a syncretic mix of Yoruba, Kongo, Catholic and Amerindian
powers, medicines and practices. The crowning figure of Oxala/Lord Jesus,
blesses all, while assembled -- orixa/saints, caboclos in feather dress,
pretos velhos (old blacks), plaster busts of the departed, photos and
candles -- are carefully arrayed. The altar is completed by cosmograms
sealed in chalk circles in the floor -- ideograms to call down the spirit.
This ecumenical symphony finds the Catholic twin Saints, Cosimo and
Damian, standing in for African twin spirits.
An ultimate altar: the Atlantic
Ocean The exhibition closes with a recreation of the beach altars of
Rio de Janeiro, built by thousands of practitioners on New Year's Eve
to ask for blessings for the coming year. These miniature, candle-lit,
personal altars, adorned with flowers and champagne, are scooped our
of the sand and dedicated to Yemoja and Oshun (Goddesses of the Ocean
and of Love) and sometimes to Ibeji (Twin Spirits). First associated
with Umbanda in the 20's and 30's, these altars dramatize the ongoing
twentieth century fusion of African, Christian and Native American icons
and ideology. They are a dramatic illustration of the explosion of African
American cultural improvisation and aesthetic creativity that insures
spiritual and moral sustenance for Africans in the Americas for centuries.
NOTE:
The Museum of African Art (593 Broadway, New York, NY 10012; 212 966-1313)
has available a comprehensive book also called Face of the Gods by
Robert Farris Thompson which traces the iconography of the purest
African altars from the forest hunter-gatherers to the complex artistic
and intellectual systems of Yoruba and Kongo civilizations and through
their creative reformulation in the Americas. The three hundred and
thirty-six page book contains 282 color and 27 black and white plates.
Cloth and paper editions are available and cost $70 and $39.50, respectively.
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