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Lot 94: Cyprien Tokoudagba (Beninese, born 1939) Houéda vodoun dangbé 51 x 69 5/16in (129.5 x 176cm) unframed

Est: $4,000 USD - $6,000 USD
BonhamsNew York, NY, USMarch 10, 2010

Item Overview

Description

Houéda vodoun dangbé
signed and inscribed 'Tokoudagba Cyprien Benin abomey' (lower right)
acrylic on canvas
51 x 69 5/16in (129.5 x 176cm)
unframed

Artist or Maker

Notes


PROVENANCE:
With Galerie Degbomey, France

Cyprien Tokoudagba began his artistic career as a restorer of the royal palaces of Abomey. Working at first-hand with the remaining artifacts of royal power gave him exceptional access to the fading traditions and symbolic systems of the Fon kings. Himself an initiate of various vodun societies, his artwork was originally only found adorning the walls of vodun temples, but since he began using canvas in 1989, his haunting portraits of gods and the iconic representations of Abomey's kings can now also be found in major museums around the world.

Tokoudagba's work thus transmits into the present the traditional symbology of the Fon and the complex world-view it contains. Here he depicts Dangbé, the python goddess, with her cousin Hébiosso (or Shango) the god of thunder. In art Hébiosso is often associated with the holy animal, the ram, and the holy colors red and white. His symbol is the oshe (double-headed axe) which represents swift and balanced justice. The energy given from this deity of thunder is a symbol of African resistance against an enslaving European culture.

Auction Details

Africa Now - African Modern & Contemporary Art

by
Bonhams
March 10, 2010, 12:00 PM EST

580 Madison Avenue, New York, NY, 10022, US