Adan Vodun Fetish Figure Aklama
Adan Vodun Fetish Figure Aklama
Adan people, mid. 20th century, Togo, Benin or Ghana, West Africa
Intriguing, abstract wooden Adan fetish figure (Aklama) with oval-shaped face and long neck. Eyes and mouth are simply cut into wood. There’s no arms. Legs are short and bulky, without feets. Adan fetishes are important objects of the Vodou cult. These small wooden figurines are responsible for the intercession with diverse deities, invoked in order to offer to the followers protection, luck and prosperity. The figurines are also made to protect the owner and his family from vicious spirits trying to get into their homes. The Adan people (called also Ada, Adangme, Agotime, Aja, Dagbe or Ga) are a small sub-group of the Ewé people and live in south-east Ghana, close to the border with Togo.
Fetishes like this were made to protect individuals or families against evil, sorcery, illness or theft, and to provide power to success. The traditional Fon religion is regionally called Vodoun, meaning "numerous immortal spirits and deities" in the Fon and Ewé languages. Vodoun is also spelled Vodun, Vodzu, Vodu or Voudou. The religious practise of the Fon people have four overlapping elements: public gods, personal or private gods, ancestral spirits, and magic or charms. The ancestral cult, believed to be necessary for the perpetuation of the clan, is the focal point of Fon social organization and of much religious activity. A typical traditional home compound of the Fon people has a Dexoxos, or ancestral shrine. There, the tovudu (family gods) are annually "fed" and honored with dancing and songs. The Fon people have a concept of a supreme being called Nana Buluku, both male and female, who gave birth to the twins named Mawu and Lisa; the first, female, was given command of the night, and the second, male, was associated with the day. After giving birth, the Mother supreme retired, and left everything to Mawu-Lisa, deities, spirits and inert universe.
Vodou cosmology centers around the spirits and other elements of divine essence that govern the Earth, a hierarchy that range in power from major deities governing the forces of nature and human society to the spirits of individual streams, trees and rocks, as well as dozen of ethnic vodun, defenders of a certain clan, tribe, or nation. Medicine is also influenced by Vodoun practises, local healers, and priests usually use plants, dried animal parts to celebrate rituals, and deal with the disease. Vodun talismans, called fetishes, are objects such as statues or dried animal or human parts that are sold for their healing and spiritually rejuvenating properties. Specifically, they are objects with inhabited by spirits. The charms are locally called gbo, gris gris, ju ju, or obeah, involve leaves, herbs, smoke and these are offerings to public or personal gods of each family. These are said to be given to humans by Legba and Sangbata (the earth deity who watches over the fields and waters of the earth and punishes offenders with smallpox), and especially by the small hairy creatures (aziza) who live in anthills and silk-cotton trees. The Ewé share many aspects of culture, religion, and art with the Fon and indeed occasionally travel to Benin to obtain shrines and spiritual aid. They share many gods, including Mawu. Similar, too, are the practise of Afa divination and Legba cult. The deity of sacred forest (Nyigbla) is very important to Ewé as well as the entire pantheon of Yehve spirits, including the god of lightning and thunder (Heviesso).
Small-sized, crudely carved figure are in good condition. Traces of white kaolin clay. Age-related wear and handling over many years. Fractures and cracks. Size approx. 20,0cm x 5,2cm x 2,5cm.
Provenance: Ex-collection of Mr. Fofana Sankoung
References and further reading:
African Vodun: Art, Psychology and Power, Suzanne Preston Blier, University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Strange but somehow Beautifull: Art of the Adan People of south-east Ghana, Michael Yates, Aklama.net (https://www.aklama.net/Yates1.html)
Vodún/Vodu, Resistance, and North/South Relations in Undemocratic Togo, Eric J. Montgomery, Brill, Journal of Religion in Africa, pp. 224-248, 2020.
Vodou, Serving the Spirits, The Pluralism Project, Harward University, 2020.
Four Vodun Ceremonies, George Eaton Simpson, The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 59, No. 232, pp. 154-167, Amercan Folklore Society, 1946.
Contemporary Vodun Arts of Ouidah, Benin, Dana Rush, African Arts, Vol. 34, No. 4, pp. 32-47 + 94-96, UCLA, 2001.
They Died in Blood: Morality and Communitas in Ewe Ritual, Eric J. Montgomery, Journal of Ritual Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1, pp. 25-40, 2018.
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