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Power Figure (Nkishi) - Image 1
Power Figure (Nkishi) - Image 2
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Public Domain

Tetela

Power Figure (Nkishi)

Tetela, 20th century

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Tetela

Power Figure (Nkishi)

Tetela, 20th century

Physical Qualities Wood, animal hide, metal, 18 7/8 in. (48 cm.)
Credit Line Gift of Asif Shaikh, McLean, Virginia
Object Number 2013.365
Messenger. Protector. Avenger. The multiple roles of this rare Tetela power figure speak to the historic importance of ancestors in this central African society. Sculpted in wood and consecrated with spiritual substances (bishimba), this sculpture served as conduit between the world of the dead and that of the living. In times of danger and communal distress, ancestral spirits (mikishi) appeared in the dreams of the figure’s elderly guardian (nkujna). She would then organize a public procession in which the figure—held by the two poles displayed alongside it—would confront and chase away the malevolent forces plaguing the community.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 2013; Asif Shaikh, VA, by purchase
Rena Hoisington, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "New Arrivals: Gifts of Art for a New Century," February 7-May 8, 2016.

Culture

Tetela

2000–2000

Meet Tetela

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