Sceptre for dancing
Are you interested in this item?This item is up for auction at Catawiki. Please click on "respond to advert" (orange button) to get redirected to the Catawiki website. Catawikiâs goal is to make special objects universally available. Our weekly auctions feature thousands of unusual, rare, and exceptional objects you wonât find in just any store. Sceptre used in ritual dances dedicated to the Goddess Shango, especially to request rain, as she is considered the Goddess of thunder and lightning.She is recognisable by the double axe shaped as a decoration that she wears on her head. The Yoruba people have a complex religious tradition (called Orisha) that includes a rich group of divine figures (according to some Yoruba acknowledged deities are 401)Around the religion developed a dense network of rituals, dances, arts that allowed the Yoruba people not only to convey until today extraordinary and vibrant rituals (some even considered intangible heritage by UNESCO, such as the Ifa divination), but also export them overseas, affecting not only the religion (Yoruba elements are at the base of the Haitian Voodoo or Cuban SanterĂa), but also Caribbean culture and music and especially in Cuba.They are skilled sculptors both of wood and lost wax.Country of origin: NigeriaEthnic group: YorubaMaterial: WoodDating: early second half of the 20th centurySize: Height 55 cm - Width 20 cm - Thickness 8 cm, weight 750 g. Read more