Mother and Child
1850-1950; Cameroon, Bamileke; Wood; height 59 cm (23 in.);
Founders Society Purchase, Eleanor Clay Ford Fund for African
Art; 79.22
Before being granted full power to rule, newly installed Bamileke
kings were required to father a child to prove their ability to
continue the royal lineage. The mother of the king's first child
was commemorated by a sculpture of this type; she was often
elected head of domestic affairs and placed in charge of the
king's other wives. Emphasizing this royal power, the mother is
shown dispassionately looking ahead, while her child's body seems
agitated and almost contorted in the act of feeding. These
figures were generally placed at the entrance to a royal
residence.
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