Eric Chaim Kline, Bookseller

Eric Chaim Kline, Bookseller

Art of Equatorial Guinea: The Fang Tribes

New York: Rizzoli, 1990. First edition. Hardcover. Large quarto. 177, [1]pp. Original photo-illustrated dust-jacket over tan cloth with black lettering on spine. The Fang tribes of Cameroon, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea carved polished wooden statues, used in ancestor worship, that are fiercely enigmatic and were said to possess certain powers. Manipulation of these naked female and male figures was believed to resuscitate the dead. French ethnologist Perrois and Spanish art historian Delage set these statues in the context of Fang religion, which includes secret initiation societies, witchcraft and ritual sacrifice. They discuss the Fangs' migrations from savannahs to jungles and trace expeditions into West Africa by European explorers and ethnologists from the late 19th century to the 1940s. Also showcased in color and black-and-white illustrations are ceremonial masks, brass collars worn by men and women, and canes in the form of human figures. The book brings to light an art that reached its high point a century ago and has all but disappeared. Previous owner's blind-stamp on half-title (Norman Hurst). Very minor age-toning along paper margin. Dust-jacket, binding and interior in overall good+ to very good condition. vg. Item #34956

Price: $125.00

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