MEDIA INFORMATION

 
 
 
COLLECTION NAME:
The AMICA Library
Record
AMICA ID:
MIA_.74.22
AMICA Library Year:
1998
Object Type:
Sculpture
Creator Name:
Ijo
Creator Nationality:
African; West African; Nigerian
Creator Role:
sculptor
Creator Name-CRT:
Ijo
Title:
Memorial Screen
View:
Front
Creation Date:
late 19th century
Creation Start Date:
1866
Creation End Date:
1899
Materials and Techniques:
wood, wicker, paint
Dimensions:
H.37-1/2 x W.28 x D.9-3/4 in.
Component Measured:
overall
Measurement Unit:
in
AMICA Contributor:
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Owner Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
ID Number:
74.22
Credit Line:
The John R. Van Derlip Fund
Rights:
Context:

Ijaw people live on the coastal delta of the Niger River, a location advantageous to trade. When European merchants began voyages to Africa in the fifteenth century, the Ijaw served as middlemen in the exchange of gold, ivory, and slaves for European products. Certain families became extremely wealthy, comparable in their economic power to the merchant princes of Europe.

When a member of a trading house died, relatives commissioned an artist to produce a memorial screen called a duein fobara, or forehead of the dead. For Ijaw people one's immortal spirit resides in the forehead, and the screen becomes the spirit's home after death. The image represents the deceased person at the center, surrounded by servants, and is kept in the trading house and given symbolic offerings of food and drink. Although trading houses have declined in power and importance duein fobara screens are still occasionally made.

Related Image Identifier Link:
MIA_.1422c.tif

Memorial Screen

Memorial Screen