skip to main content
Brighton & Hove Museums Search the Brighton & Hove Museums web site
The Royal Pavilion, Libraries & Museums Collections
Search the online collection
Advanced Search | Search Help

Gallery Themes : Bedu Masquerade

Collections Home
navigation symbol Bedu Masquerade
navigation symbol About Bedu - introduction
navigation symbol Making the Bedu mask - sculpting Bedu
navigation symbol Painting Bedu
navigation symbol Performing Bedu - Zorogo
navigation symbol Performing Bedu - Classic Bedu dances
navigation symbol Initiation to Bedu
navigation symbol Greeting Bedu
navigation symbol Listen to the sounds of Bedu.
navigation symbol Making the Bedu collection at Brighton
navigation symbol Bedu as a theme in Performance Gallery
navigation symbol References
 
 
Previous introduction Next

  Painting Bedu

Painting Bedu, after which the painters will sing 'Bedu arives' to signal that the wood has become Bedu.
Painting Bedu, after which the painters will sing 'Bedu arives' to signal that the wood has become Bedu.
Bedu mask is being renewed  and 'civilised' with paint
Bedu mask is being renewed and 'civilised' with paint

The painting of the Bedu mask is the pivotal moment in its transfer from the bush to the village. Every New Year Bedu is brought back from its camp in the bush and given a "home" in the village. On its arrival women paint the mask.

The form given to the Bedu mask can be seen as the scars of its "domestication" - the wounds inflicted by the male sculptor. The paint applied by the women is the dressing that covers these scars and transforms the appearance of the mask. The colours and designs are not only the marks of its "civilisation" but also the insignia of its powers.

The three basic colours used are white, red and black, representing God, the earth and the shrines or spirits. Both the colouring agent and the medium determine the meaning of the paint.

Black, white and red pigments are ready to be used,  All © Karel Arnaut 1993
Black, white and red pigments are ready to be used, All © Karel Arnaut 1993

- White is kaolin mixed with water and is said to refer to the rain, the past, the ancestors, God and the sky.
- Red is clay or stone dust mixed with egg white. Eggs refer to the sacrifices made for the earth (clay) or for the shrines (red stone dust).
- Black made with the ashes of the pods of the Nadedigo tree (the preferred habitat of the spirits) refers to the shrines or the spirits. Black made with soot of carbon from old batteries refers to the earth.
- Shea butter, the medium of black pigment, also has double meanings: the Shea tree is either associated with the earth, or with the dangerous spirits said to inhabit it.

God, the earth and the shrines or spirits are the main forces that determine the lives of people and the well-being of society. By incorporating these three forces, Bedu acts as a mediator between them.

^ Top

 
Previous introduction Next
 



A A A