With a naturalistically rendered portrait and protruding lower lip terminating close upon the chin, this Makonde helmet mask called lipico (plural mapico) beautifully displays the hallmarks of its type. The drowsy, entranced expression of the face, so confidently formed in smooth undulations and subtle volumes, seems almost taken from life, and the application of hair above the brow only enhances the effect. A ruddy pigmentation colors the mask over its full surface, which is unmarked by the elaborate scarification designs that often adorn masks of this kind.
Mapico masks are worn for ceremonial dances during the rites of passage of circumcised boys called mapico dances.These masks are carved by master craftsmen and are made of a soft wood and often feature human hair.
James Stephenson Gallery
Private collection, Boston
Noble Endicott, New York