Kwele (Bakwele),
Rare and Exceptional dance mask, Gabon, c. 1900
Carved wood, native trade paints, charring, pigment,
20 h × 12 w × 2 d in (51 × 30 × 5 cm)
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Kwele (Bakwele),
Rare and Exceptional dance mask, Gabon, c. 1900
Carved wood, native trade paints, charring, pigment,
20 h × 12 w × 2 d in (51 × 30 × 5 cm)

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Masque Kwélé, Gabon ou République du Congo.
Kwele mask (early 20th century). The Kwele of the Republic of Congo, Gabon, and Cameroon. Wood.
Current at the Museum La Rochelle.
The Kwele people are a tribal group of eastern Gabon, Republic of the Congo, and Cameroons in Central Africa. They fled the coastal area of West Africa during the 19th century, after their traditional enemies acquired firearms from the slave traders. This altercation is often called the "Poupou" war.The Kwele then settled into lands between the Dja and Ivindo rivers. The Kwele are noted for their ceremonial masks which are collected as art objects.
The masks are associated with the Beete association, which maintains social order, and are also used in initiation rites and at the end of mourning periods. Thought to represent benevolent forest spirits, the masks represent people or animals, or a combination of the two. Many lack eye slits; the masks are shown rather than worn, and many are painted with white kaolin earth, which the Kwele associate with light and clarity.
In the beete ritual which they perform, there is a gorilla masked person (Gabon) as the opposition to the Ekuk mask.
Although they fashioned objects in iron, it is above all through their sculptures, masks, and anthropomorphic, zoomorphic, and even anthropozoomorphic statuettes that they gained their fame. Their masks are recognized by their great simplicity, in a concentrated and analytical expression.
Gon mask evoking a gorilla, of the Kwele people, Republic of the Congo or Gabon. Artist unknown; early 20th century. Now in the Musée du quai Branly, Paris. Photo credit: Ismoon/Wikimedia Commons.

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Mask of the Kwele people, Gabon or Republic of the Congo. Now in the American Museum of Natural History, NYC.
(via The New York Times > Arts > Slide Show > African Art at the Met > Slide 6 of 11)