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Abron
The Fang of Gabon
migrated from the north-westduring the 18th and 19th
centuries and are now scattered across southern
Cameroon, and Gabon. Principally hunters, they do
also farm however.
Their social
structure is bases on the clan, a group of individuals
with a common ancestor , and on the family.
The Fang are famous
for their Byeri heads and figures, these were made for
the Byeri, a family cult that venerated important
ancestors by preserving their remains in contianers
made of bark that was stitched together to form a
cylindrical box. Ancestral status was awarded to
founders of lineages, heads of clans and families and
women that dipslayed etxraordinary powers, such as the
ability to bear a unusual number of children. The
essential remains of these ancestors was their skulls,
however at times, bones from the limbs and vertebrae
were preserved aswell. These Fang reliquary carving
served as a shield between the relics and possible
destructive force, as sort of guardian. It protected
both the remains of the ancestor from intruders and
malevolent supernatural forces and vulnerable humans
such as the uninitiated, women and non-family members
from the potentially dangerous ancestors. Only
initiated men of the family clan were permitted to see
the relics. During one of the byeri rituals, known a
melan, young initiates were given hallucinogenic herbs
and presented with figural statues as symbolic
invocations of their ancestors. By doing so, statues
were used to animate the deceased and to actualize the
presence of the clan ancestors. When these staues
were removed from the ancestral remains, however, they
functiononly as symbols and no longer as direct
receptacles for the spirit.
The masks of the
Ngil society were typically elongated and covered with
the white pigment of kaolin clay, which is considered
by the Fang as the color of the dead or spirits. The
Ngil acssociation existed over and above the clan,
wielding political and judicial powers. The masters
of the Ngil society moved freely and without danger
from village to village as their role as peace-keepers
was boldly recognised. They were considered
particularly useful in combating sorcery and evil
practices. When a Ngil master was summoned to a
village he would arrive at night, dressed in a raffia
costume and mask, with a group of followers carrying
torched, thus adding to the dramatic effect of the
mask.
Reference:
African:
Art of a Continent - Tom Phillips. ISBN:3-7913-2004-1
African
Form and Imagery - Detroit institue of Arts. ISBN:
0-89558-145-0
Tribal
Arts of Africa -Jaques-baptise Baquart.
ISBN:0-500-28231-5
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