Kota
(Akota, Bakota, Kuta), Gabon and Republic of Congo
Reliquary
bwete figure.
Several ethnic groups termed Kota use this kind of abstract figures as
guardians for ancestral bone relics. Historically, the Kota left their dead unburied in
the forest far from the village. Under the influence of neighboring tribes, they then
began to bury their dead. Chiefs were always buried, but often their bones (especially the
skull) were later exhumed and placed with magical objects (shells, seeds, fruits) in a
bark box or a basket called a bwete,
on the top of which a figure was placed. These figures are unusual in African
representation of the human head because of its flat, two-dimensional character. The head
rests on a column, which opens to lozenge shaped legs. The semicircular top is considered
as headdress. Kota rituals allied to ancestor cults aimed to honor illustrious deceased
members of the lineage, but also would carefully keep them out of reach of other
villagers. Terms such as abstraction or realism are inappropriate here, for this is an
example of the most extreme stylization.
Material:
wood, yellow metal sheeting, bone
Size:
31x15x4