Tribal Art, online sale of tribal art, primitive art and primitive art
Search option




Tribal art items:


The site Art Tribal offers a wide selection of tribal art objects, masks, statues, bronzes and everyday objects. All these tribal works are rigorously selected from international private collections.

Chamba statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Chamba statue

The chamba statuary presents a certain geometry reminiscent of the design of the works of the Mumuye, including a very particular morphology. Here, a columnar bust around which the relief of disproportionate arms is cut out in a diamond shape towards stocky, crenellated limbs. The head marked with parallel scarifications, on which a hat seems to rest in balance, sinks into the shoulders. The abdominal niche conceals imprints of seeds of abrus and remains of feathers.
Velvet red ocher patina. Desication crack, losses.
Installed since the 17th century on the south bank of the Benue in Nigeria, the Chamba have resisted the attempts of conquest by the Fulani, nomads who have settled in large numbers in northern Nigeria. They are known for their famous buffalo mask with its two ...


View details

950.00  760.00

Yaka Statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Yaka Statue

African art, the charms of lineages
State of African tribal art Yaka whose singularity lies in the trumpet nose, phallic symbol also associated with the elephant. These primitive African statues, which provided protection from enemies and were linked to fertility, were made according to the instructions of the Nganga ngoombu and the object's sponsor. This powerful object of tribal art was then activated using rituals and incantatory formulas. This statue with a golden patina comes from the vast collection of African tribal art of Mr. Guy Mercier, now deceased, consultant for the Solvay group, which began it at the beginning of the 20th century. While radiating in West and Central Africa as part of his work, and collecting in-situ works, the majority of his collection is nevertheless ...


View details

750.00  600.00

Mbede statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Mbede statue

Collection of African art P. Malisse.
Ancestor worship in the African art of the Mbede, Mbete, or Ambete

The cult of the ancestors, among the Mbete, is accompanied by these sculpted figures whose dorsal cavity frequently plays the role of a reliquary. This remarkable female statue, sculpted in wood then lined with metal sheets, has a flat face carved into a spherical head without a headdress. The morphology expresses vigor and stability. Attached to the swollen bust, the arms are bent at a right angle. The bending of the thick and muscular legs announces a ritual dance. Abraded black patina. Eroded feet.
The Mbete form a tribe of Gabon, on the border of the Middle Congo, neighboring the Obamba, whose history has been marked by a long-term conflict against the ...


View details

1450.00  1160.00

Mossi mask
promo art africain
Tribal art > African mask > Mossi mask

Figurative animal mask, uncommon, representing the head of a mammal. Diamond patterns, based on natural pigments, are painted on the surface.
Matte patina of use, small chips.
The African art sculptures of the Bobo, Bwa, Kurumba and Mossi, living in Burkina Faso, frequently take up and combine stylized elements borrowed from men, animals or even insects. It is the spirits of nature who are believed to determine an individual's well-being and prosperity, and adversity will be seen as the result of neglect of collective rituals. It is therefore during different celebrations that the mask will personify a spirit of nature or that of an ancestor in order to influence the daily lives of members of the ethnic group. They appear to honor the deceased during funeral rites, and to ...


View details

750.00  600.00

Chamba statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Chamba statue

The chamba statuary has certain points in common with that of the Mumuye. This copy adopts a design offering the particularity of a curved bust, framed in height by short folded arms. The bust widens, extending hips in cylindrical relief. The legs are classically cut, stocky and semi-flexed. The simple-featured head is distinguished by a high crest and huge circular ears.
Slightly satiny reddish brown patina.
Installed since the 17th century on the south bank of the Benue in Nigeria, the Chamba have resisted the attempts of conquest by the Fulani, nomads who have settled in large numbers in northern Nigeria. They are known for their famous buffalo mask with its two flat jaws extending the head. The statuary, less frequent, is divided into figures of protection (tauwa, sing. tau) ...


View details

450.00  360.00

Statue Tabwa
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Statue Tabwa

Ex-French tribal art collection.
Statues Tabwa, traditional sculptures of prestige in African art.
The Luba dominated the Tabwa in the Lake Tanganyika region between Zaire and Zambia. "Tabwa" or " being attached" presumably refers to the system of slavery practiced in the past by Islamic merchants.
The Tabwa then regained their independence thanks to the wealth provided by the ivory trade. Just as the influence of Luba is noticeable in the societies and rites of the Tabwa , tanzanian tribes have also marked the statuary tabwa with regard to geometric decorative motifs.

Linear checkerboard scarifications run through the face and bust of this leader who is supposed to protect, according to François Neyt, the village from the sorcerers. Its headdress is also ...


View details

350.00  280.00

Statue Nyamwezi
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Statue Nyamwezi

This type of statue, among the wide variety of tribal production in this region, participated in ancestor worship, others played a role in traditional dowsing activities.
The flat face, facing the sky, is hollowed out with rectangular orifices depicting the mouth and the eyes. Arm stubs frame a thick bust, extended by powerful legs.
Matte abraded red patina, desication cracks, losses.
The Nyamwézi are made up of tribes of various origins making up the largest group in central Tanzania, and yet sharing the same cultural traits. They were involved in the 19th century in the caravan trade that crossed their territory, the Unyamwézi. They were therefore led to travel from the Congo (R.D.C.) to the coastal cities of the Indian Ocean, where they were called "Nyamwézi", ...


View details

780.00  624.00

Ambete statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Reliquary > Ambete statue

Statues of ancestors in the African art of Mbede, Mbete, or Ambete.
Ancestor worship among the Mbete is accompanied by sculpted figures frequently playing the role of reliquary. The dorsal cavity no longer has a flap. The flat face is encrusted with cowries forming a half-closed look, a short nose, a wide mouth lined with metal teeth. The hairstyle features braids gathered in shells. The bust, proportionally stretched, is framed by small arms placed at right angles. Foot missing.
Uneven patina, desication cracks.
The Mbete form a tribe of Gabon, on the border of the Middle Congo, close to the Obamba and the Pounou, whose history has been marked by a long-term conflict against the Teke. They do not have a centralized political organization, practice ancestor worship.


View details

750.00  600.00

Dogon mask
promo art africain
Tribal art > African mask > Dogon mask

Unusual variant of the mask associated among the Dogon with the antelope. The horns folded back recall the walu, an animal linked to the Dogon cosmogony. The face surrounded by a beard offers powerful features. Abraded greasy patina.
Parallel to Islam, the Dogon religious rites are organized around four main cults: the Lébé, relating to fertility, the Wagem, ancestor worship under the authority of the patriarch, the Binou invoking the world of spirits, and the Awa mask society regarding funerals. The "dama" is a ceremony dedicated to restoring the order of things following bereavement. It was originally to protect themselves from the "nyama" (soul) of the victim that the Dogon carved a mask in the image of an animal. Guarantor of order, the mask of the Walu charges the spectators ...


View details

650.00  520.00

Bamileke Seat
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Chair > Bamileke Seat

In African art, the Bamiléké demonstrate their know-how through the use of multicolored beads.
This monoxyle seat having the appearance of a table, named rü mfo among the Bamum, presents human figurative motifs enhanced by contrasting colours. A basic structure is carved in wood and then covered, above a raffia canvas, with a latticework of imported multicolored beads.

Located in the border region of Nigeria, the North West Province of Cameroon, the Grassland is made up of several ethnic groups: Tikar, Anyang, Widekum, Chamba, Bamoun, or Bamum and Bamileke. Several centralized chiefdoms, or kingdoms, based on customary associations, secret societies, are organized around the Fon who has broad powers. Among the Bamilékés of Sudano-Bantu origin, as in other ...


View details

750.00  600.00

Montol statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Montol statue

The design of this sculpture here suggests a dynamic, thanks to the lateral inclination of a powerful bust. The arms, extended by large hands, seem to draw the body forward as well. The expressive face, stretched under the cylindrical and flat headdress, offers discreet parallel marks. Clog feet support high legs in flexion.
Irregular crusty patina. Erosions concentrated at the top and on the internal area of ​​one foot. The Goemai, Tarok (who call their healing society Kwompten), and the Ngas of central Nigeria make use of similar, often more schematic statues.
It was during healing rites, or even divination of the origins of illnesses, that this sculpture played a major role for members of male Komtin society. The Montol, on the right bank of the Benué, preserved the ...


View details

890.00  712.00

Nyamezi statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Nyamezi statue

High spread legs support this sculpted figure whose stocky bust, on which a tiny chest points, seems to lean forward. The drooping shoulders are rounded towards arms without wrists extending from flat hands. The head is underlined by a crest, ample ears enhance a neutral and discreet physiognomy.
Beautiful glossy patina. Irregular surface, lacks.
In the southern coastal region of Tanzania, around Dar-es-Salaam, a relatively homogeneous group produced most of the artistic productions. It includes the Swahili, Kaguru, Doé, Kwéré, Luguru, Zaramo, Kami. The second region is made up of a territory covering southern Tanzania to Mozambique, where some Makonde and the Yao, the Ngindo, Mwéra, and Makua live. In the North-East of Tanzania, the Chaga, Paré, Chamba, Zigua, Massaï, ...


View details

950.00  760.00

Dogon Stool
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Chair > Dogon Stool

Reduced version for this old Dogon stool supported by four geometric figures embodying the mythical ancestor Nommo. The contours of the flat, oval seat are engraved with symbolic linear motifs. Large metal staples were used to consolidate the structure. Velvety matte patina, abrasions. Cracks.
The Dogon are a people renowned for their cosmogony, their esotericism, their myths and legends. Their population is estimated at around 300,000 souls living in the south-west of the Niger loop in the Mopti region of Mali (Bandiagara, Koro, Banka), near Douentza and part of northern Burkina (north-west of Ouahigouya ). The villages are often perched on top of the scree on the side of the hills, according to a unique architecture. The history of Dogon migrations and settlements (about ten ...


View details

490.00  392.00

Koro cup
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Koro cup

Sculpture depicting an ancestor with an expressive face. The hollowed out abdomen was intended to contain beverages during ritual ceremonies. Surface coated with a thick satin patina, filmy, partially flaking. Internal clear (palm oil?) residues.

According to some authors, two people were drinking there at the same time.( Arts of Nigeria, A. Lebas)
It is in the northern part of the interior of Nigeria that the Koro settled, alongside the Waja, Mama, Hausa, and Dakakari. Best known for their masks adorned with red abrus seeds embodying the ancestors, they also use this type of ritual offering cups at funerals, during sacrifices and masked ceremonies.


View details

340.00  272.00

Kongo Crucifix
promo art africain
Tribal art > Usual african items > Kongo Crucifix

Belgian African tribal art collection.
Among the Kongo chiefs at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, the crucifix took the place, among the chiefly regalia, of a symbol of the power of authority. A ceremony during the investiture of the chief required that the future leader receive from the hands of a dignitary, during a codified ritual, a nkangi kiditu. This badge of power, inspired by ancient Christian crucifixes imported by the Portuguese in the 16th century, could also have a therapeutic function, and, in addition to various uses, be brandished during funeral ceremonies during which the object was subjected to libations. palm oil or palm wine. Height on base: 28 cm. The cross would not be a motif specific to the Christian world, the Kongo consider that ...


View details

390.00  312.00

Mossi doll
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Dolls > Mossi doll

Old fertility doll adopting the classic morphology, but whose narrow head ending in a point remains rarer. From the leather the sheath to the upper part of the neck that a fine braid delimits. Beautiful patina of use, contact abrasions and desication cracks.
The hope of a pregnancy is accompanied in certain groups by initiation rites. Wooden figures are then carved, some reflecting both genders, in many cases clothed in beads and clothes. During the period of confinement, the doll, which becomes a child who asks to be fed, washed and anointed on a daily basis, becomes the girl's only companion. After the initiation, they will be carried on the women's backs, or tied around their necks. The wooden dolls (biiga), carved in their free time by the blacksmiths of Burkina Faso, are ...


View details

490.00  392.00

Sukuma fetish
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Sukuma fetish

Female African statuette, without arms, with a bust sheathed in animal skin into which horns have been slipped. The top of the head is perforated for a ritual charge. These statuettes would relate to the ancestors.

In the southern coastal region of Tanzania, around Dar-es-Salaam, a relatively homogeneous group produced most of the artistic productions. It includes the Swahili, Kaguru, Doé, Kwéré, Luguru, Zaramo, Kami. The second region is made up of a territory covering southern Tanzania to Mozambique, where some Makonde and the Yao, the Ngindo, Mwéra, and Makua live. In the North-East of Tanzania, the Chaga, Paré, Chamba, Zigua, Massaï, Iraqw, Gogo, and Héhé have an artistic production presenting similarities with Malagasy and Batak art, which could be explained by ...


View details

390.00  312.00

Mama mask
promo art africain
Tribal art > African mask > Mama mask

This version of African mask, a crest mask embodying a spirit of the bush, combines animal features such as a beak or a bifid mouth and rounded horns rising from a conical volume. These very refined masks, associated with the mangam ceremonies of the Mama, or Kantana, here a buffalo mask, are used within the ethnic group by members of a male association responsible for maintaining social order and increasing or promoting agricultural production. It is indeed north of Benoué that several ethnic groups produce very stylized masks worn horizontally.

Velvety pink ocher patina.
Desication cracks and signs of use.

This mask whose horns symbolize fertility is therefore danced during festivals in relation to agricultural fertility and sometimes human ...


View details

950.00  760.00

Songye statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African fetish > Songye statue

Originally from Shaba in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Songye are related to the Luba with whom they share common ancestors. This large fetish is devoid of its ventral charge bishimba and has for only ornaments, specificities of Songye statuary, an animal horn introduced at the top, and metal slats and nails on the face, reference probable to the ravages of the pox. The ears, hollowed out, are also symbolically filled with tufts of hair.
The Kuba did not produce fetishes, they obtained them from their Songye neighbors, who were considered experts in the field. Rods or iron hooks were introduced under the arms in order to move them. These protective fetishes with magical charges are called nkisi and play in African culture the role of mediator between gods and men. The ...


View details

750.00  600.00

Yoruba statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Yoruba statue

Figurative anthropomorphic sculptures from the Yoruba kingdom

This work is exceptional for its size and the complexity of its composition. It presents a female figure leaning on the back of a seat on which sits a dignitary or a king. These statues form an incarnation of the many orisa of the Yoruba, equivalent to Christian Saints. The miniature figures surrounding it would be adepts or minor deities.

Among the Yoruba, public temples, altars or chiefs' huts are adorned with lintels, doors and carved pillars, or life-size statues dedicated to the mythical "orisa" gods and supposed to attract their benefits. Centered on the veneration of its gods, or orisà, the Yoruba religion is based on artistic sculptures with coded messages (aroko). They are designed by the ...


View details

3500.00  2800.00

Yoruba statue
promo art africain
Tribal art > African Statues > Yoruba statue

This sculpture of African tribal art, supposed to facilitate communication with the sacred, reminds the deity of his duties towards men. It features the keloid marks of Yoruba nobles. Protruding eyes, plump lips, are also distinctive markers of Yoruba tribal statuary. The head of the child has been replaced by a metal element.
The painting of these statues was frequently renewed before the rites.
Locally chipped crusty patina.

Desication cracks, erosions and loss.

The main Yoruba cults are the Gélédé, Epa, Ogboni cults, and the Esu cult. Centered on the veneration of its gods, or orisà , the Yoruba religion is based on artistic sculptures endowed with coded messages ( aroko ). They are designed by the sculptors at the request of the ...


View details

750.00  600.00





Previously viewed items
Tribal art - Gelede MaskTribal art - Kongo FetishTribal art - Mbete statueTribal art - Urhobo StatueTribal art - Bamileke MaskTribal art - Dogon StatueTribal art - Mangbetu FetishTribal art - Punu MaskTribal art - Gelede MaskTribal art - Mambila mask
Tribal art  -  New York - Paris - London

© 2023 - Digital Consult SPRL

Essentiel Galerie SPRL
73A Rue de Tournai - 7333 Tertre - Belgique
+32 (0)65.529.100
visa Master CardPaypal