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Gallery Themes : Bedu Masquerade

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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
 
 
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  Making the Bedu mask - sculpting Bedu

Using a machete to cut through the root of the Kapok tree. Boroponko, 1995
Using a machete to cut through the root of the Kapok tree. Boroponko, 1995

Bedu occupies a border zone between savannah and forest. It is cut from the trees of both climatic zones and is made in the bush by the men of the village.

The mask is sculpted from the upper part of the roots of the Kapok tree, the largest forest tree of the region. The costume is made of bark taken from the Baobab tree, which has become the symbol of the African savannah.

By removing the log of wood or the "quilt" of bark, neither the Kapok nor the Baobab tree are "killed", they are merely "wounded". Such "hunting" terminology is often used in connection with sculpting Bedu or making its costume.

Hunting tools such as traps, machetes, guns, and bullets are traditionally manufactured by blacksmiths, who are highly valued for providing the tools (adze, chisel, machete) necessary for catching (sculpting) the "wild animal" (Bedu) or for hunting "toads" (Baobab bark) to "feed" (clothe) the animal.

Bedu Sculptors

Dabila Outtara, sculpting Bedu mask WA506951 Koffi Djéréba sculpting Bedu mask WA506957
Dabila Outtara, sculpting Bedu mask WA506951 Koffi Djéréba sculpting Bedu mask WA506957
The fibre under the Baobab bark is used to make 1.5m long strips for Bedu costume Men rolling ropes from strips of fibre, from which costume strips are hung
The fibre under the Baobab bark is used to make 1.5m long strips for Bedu costume Men rolling ropes from strips of fibre, from which costume strips are hung
Performer being dressed in fibre costume All images © Karel Arnaut 1995
Performer being dressed in fibre costume All images © Karel Arnaut 1995
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