Western (Kwilu)
Mbuya Mask.
The 500,000 Pende
people are mainly farmers who
produce millet, maize, plantain, and peanuts. The women do the majority of the farm work
and are wholly responsible for selling goods in the community markets. The men help with
the clearing of the fields and also contribute to the diet with occasional hunting and
fishing in the numerous local rivers. The sculptors profession is transmitted from
father to son. Mbuya, or sculptured wooden masks in the form of human or animal
faces, were worn with prescribed costumes by graduates of the Mukanda initiation school in
their coming-out rites. These masks represented a great variety of village characters,
including a clown, or chief of the dance floor, and those whose behavior was
admired or disapproved. The present mask symbolizes a particularly skillful dancer.
Although the performance was entertaining, it taught moral lessons and reinforced Pende
religious and political principals.
Material: wood