Bamum (Bamoum,
Bamoun, Banun, Mom, Mum),
Royal
smoking pipe. There are about 80,000 Bamum people. The art of Bamum is in a great
part the art of a royal court that had a complex protocol and numerous rituals. The king
and his court is a focal point of the Bamum, and exert powerful influence upon the
development of the plastic art that tends towards dramatization, power and sumptuous
luxury. The size and decoration of pipes were
regulated by a strict code, according to the owners rank and wealth. The pipes like
this one were too large to use and were, therefore, prestige objects, sometimes wedding
presents. The king had to smoke the pipe not only in the palace, but when he traveled
among the people, because the smoking of it was regarded as a rite that would make both
the fields and the women fertile. The art of smoking was a vital part of royal ritual.
According to S. P.Blier, the bowl portays a
face, and in many Bamum pipes, these faces are said to represent the heads of defeated
enemi rulers.
Material: terracotta and wood
Size of the bowl: H. 13, W.
7, D. 7