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Observed and described for the first time in the 18th century by Louis de Grandpré, the large Punu statues were honored by a sanctuary, the tchiliba. Linked to the Bwiti initiates’ society, these effigies, representing an illustrious ancestor, were placed on a pedestal or in a niche at the back of the consecrated temple. They presided over the dances and ritual ceremonies and helped to discover and repel the spell casters or « soul eaters » who prowled the villages at night.
Provenance
Acquired in the 1950’s by a wood merchant based in Port Gentil, Gabon
By descent
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