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African Carving: A Dogon Kanaga Mask

African Carving: A Dogon Kanaga Mask MAIN

African Carving: A Dogon Kanaga Mask

Price: $295.00
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Filmmaker Name: Thomas Blakely
Film Length: 19 min
Film Year: 1974
Duration: 0-20 min
Decade: 1970s
Color: color
Region: Africa
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The Kanaga mask is used in deeply sacred rituals by the Dogon people of Mali. Carving this mask is as important a ritual as the ceremonies in which the mask is used. The carver, a blacksmith, finds the proper tree and, in a secret cave outside the village, he shapes the mask with gestures which repeat the movement of the dancers who will wear it. When a dancer wears the Kanaga mask he becomes the Creator symbolically. He touches the ground with his mask and directs a soul to Heaven. Although these dances are now frequently performed for the public, the meaning of Kanaga is retained by the Dogon who fear, respect and depend on the power of the mask.  

This film contains Dama dance material from the Wunderman Foundation.



SELECTED SCREENINGS & AWARDS
Forum for Visual Anthropology, Switzerland, 2009

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