AIDMIA_.95.84}~
OTYSculpture}~
OTG}~
OTNFemale Portrait Head}~
METH.12 x W.5-3/4 x D.7 in.}~
MEG}~
MCMoverall}~
MDUInches.}~
OMG}~
OMDterra-cotta}~
CRG}~
CRTIfe (Yoruba)}~
CRCIfe (Yoruba)}~
CRRArtist}~
OCG}~
OCT12th century - 14th century}~
OCS1100}~
OCE1399}~
STG}~
SUG}~
CXG}~
CXD<P>Between the 12th and 14th centuries, the royal city of Ife,
in present-day Nigeria, was a center of economic, religious and political
power, and its importance was reflected in a highly developed and distinctive
sculptural style. Portrait heads modeled in terra-cotta or bronze stood
on royal shrines in the palace compound. This head, recently acquired
by The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, probably represents a woman of
the royal court. The delicate lines on her face show a pattern of scarification,
the cutting of designs into the skin to mark identity, status and beauty.
The sensitive realism of this portrait is unusual among African art
styles which typically present abstracted and generalized representations
of the human image. Works of art from Ife are very rare. This superb
creation is one of only three in American museum collections.</P>}~
OOG}~
OONThe Minneapolis Institute of Arts}~
OOPMinneapolis, Minnesota, USA}~
OOA95.84}~
OOCThe John R. Van Derlip Fund}~
ORG}~
ORLhttp://www.artsmia.org/restrictions.html}~
RIG}~
RIPY}~
RIDFull view}~
RIRHasFormat}~
RILMIA_.1533c.tif}~
RMG}~
RMDAntenna Audio: Permanent Collection Tour}~
RMRIsReferencedBy}~
RMLMIA_.AA200102.14.mp3}~
DCG}~
DCBSoth: MIA Photo/Scanning Services}~
DCD19980225}~
AVD20000614}~
AVV1.2}~
ALY1998}~
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Last modified on
October 16, 2001