A brass bhuta mask of a boar
A brass bhuta mask of a boar

SOUTH INDIA, KARNATAKA, 18TH/19TH CENTURY

細節
A brass bhuta mask of a boar
South India, Karnataka, 18th/19th century
Very finely modeled with long snout, bared teeth and tusks, and bulging eyes, adorned with naga-hood earrings with an emerging elephant and man at left and right respectively, and an elaborate headdress with a multitude of naga-hoods and finials
16¾ in. (42.6 cm.) high
來源
Private collection, New Jersey, acquired 22 April 1999

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拍品專文

This type of mask is used during bhuta worship, practiced in the coastal region of Karnataka. Bhutas are celestial or ancestral spirits that are represented by hundreds of different forms, including forms of Shiva, buffalos and boars, as in the present example. During an all-night festival, the mask is worn by a trained medium who invites the bhuta to possess him. He then sings, dances, tells stories, gives advice and solves problems for the sponsoring family or village group. See S. Aryan, Unknown Masterpieces of Indian Folk and Trival Art, 2005, p. 61-63, for bhuta masks made in brass; and the exhibition Dancing Masks - Bronzes from Southern India, 17 May - 23 August, 2009 at the Rietberg, Zurich.

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