Aside from Halloween, Mardi Gras and news reports of robberies and terrorism, masks don't figure much in contemporary American life. They're everywhere in cultural history, though, from ancient Greek theater to 18th-century French balls and Venetian street life.
A spectacular display of unusual African masks, on view at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts through Feb. 8, adds another chapter to that story.
"Visions From the Forests: The Art of Liberia and Sierra Leone" is an engrossing display of rare wooden masks plus a modest selection of jewelry, textiles and stone sculpture from the Dan, Mano, Loma, Mende and other communities whose rain forest territory falls roughly within Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire on the West Coast of Africa.
Masks are the exhibition's centerpiece, and their elegant design, fine carving and beautiful polish make them admirable as sculpture. However, it's the explanations of the dances, celebrations, initiation rituals, standards of beauty and character associated with the masks that will make them more than exotic trophies to Westerners.
Organized by the Minneapolis museum, the exhibit includes 75 pieces given to the museum by the late William Siegmann, a Minneapolis native who worked in Liberia from 1965 to 1987, first as a Peace Corps volunteer and later as a museum curator and scholar. The show opened at the National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C., last spring and will travel to the Indiana University Art Museum in Bloomington and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta after it closes in Minneapolis.
Innovative scholarship
Liberia's American ties date to the early 1800s when freed U.S. slaves resettled there, but much of the country remained isolated, as Siegmann found in 1966 when he discovered that he was the first white man to pass through a coastal region since writer Graham Greene in 1936.
Siegmann helped to establish two Liberian museums including the National Museum in Monrovia, and then to rebuild them after they were looted and destroyed during the civil wars that ravaged the country between 1989 and 2003. Now, tragically, the same area is being devastated by the Ebola crisis.
Although he was a curator of African art at the Brooklyn Museum for 20 years, Siegmann remained a Liberian at heart. "I loved living in Africa and the relationships I developed with people there," he once said in an interview.