拍品专文
La plupart des Gouro utilisaient leurs doigts pour manger. La cuiller était utilisée exclusivement par les anciens et les chefs de village. Elles étaient un attribut du statut social et un insigne de prestige. L’extrémité du manche est ornée d’une tête d’animal, possiblement celle d’un buffle, ancêtre protecteur de nombreuses familles qui ne pouvaient ni les chasser, ni les manger.
While most Guro ate with their hands, chiefs and lineage elders used certain markers of distinction to heighten their prestige. Among these were spoons, whose main purpose was one of ostentation, for they were the sign of their owner’s social status. The head sculpted at the end of the handle possibly represents a bush-cow. This animal was very common in the Guro region and was the protective ancestor of many families, who could not kill nor eat them.
While most Guro ate with their hands, chiefs and lineage elders used certain markers of distinction to heighten their prestige. Among these were spoons, whose main purpose was one of ostentation, for they were the sign of their owner’s social status. The head sculpted at the end of the handle possibly represents a bush-cow. This animal was very common in the Guro region and was the protective ancestor of many families, who could not kill nor eat them.