Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:39:18.800Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

African Art Studies Since 1957: Achievements and Directions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2016

Extract

Studies on African sculpture serve as point of reference in this paper. Since a full analysis of African sculpture cannot easily be separated from its sociological, technological, and ideational contexts, and since sculpture itself presents only one aspect of wide-ranging but ill-defined artistic activities and aesthetic concepts, however, these other features obviously also need mention.

There is no attempt to review the recent work of individual scholars or to characterize particular models of approach or schools of thought; this would require a badly needed but much longer and circumstantial study. Rather the paper is limited to some general observations about the kinds of works students of African art have produced and some of the needs that seem to emerge from this inventory.

In the last twenty-five years a large quantity of studies on African art, written in English and several other European languages, have been published by ever-increasing numbers of anthropologists, art historians, critics, artists, musicologists, connoisseurs, collectors, and dealers. There are many reasons to be satisfied with the achievements. Students of African art now have specialized associations and exclusive journals besides the many journals that have always been receptive to articles on African art. There is now a book series specifically on African art (Indiana University Press, Traditional Arts of Africa) in addition to many other serials and museum publications that regularly include relevant inventories, surveys, and stylistic and cultural analyses. Specialists on African art have achieved tenured positions not only in museums but also in anthropology, art, and history of art departments. There is an endless succession of exhibitions, and major art museums have deigned to organize some of them. In brief, there is an international boom of African art studies. After decades of relative obscurity and neglect, the new importance of the field has now led to a kind of euphoria and complacency among many specialists. This is evidenced, for example, in book reviews, which are either excessively eulogistic or severe and overcritical, and also in the proliferation of generalizations and in the widespread acceptance of assumptions and working hypotheses as proven facts.

Type
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Panel Papers
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Ackerman, James S. 1962. ”A Theory of Style.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticsm 20: 227–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, Marie Jeanne, (ed.) 1980. Special Issue of Ethnologische Zeitschrift Zürich.Google Scholar
Allison, Philip. 1968. African Stone Sculpture. London: Lund Humphries.Google Scholar
Armstrong, Robert Plant. 1969. ”The Arts in Human Culture: Their Significance and Their Study,” pp. 119–29 in Carter, Gwendolen M. and Paden, Ann (ed.) Expanding Horizons in African Studies. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Armstrong, Robert Plant. 1971. The Affecting Presence: An Essay in Humanistic Anthropology. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Balandier, Georges. 1960. ”The French Tradition of African Research.” Human Organization 19: 108–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bascom, William. 1962. ”African Material Culture, Technology, and Ecological Adaptation.” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 96: 581–89.Google Scholar
Bascom, William. and Gebauer, Paul. 1953. Handbook of West African Art. Milwaukee: Public Museum.Google Scholar
Bastin, Marie-Louise. 1961. Art décoratif tshokwe. 2 vols. Lisbon: Museu do Dundo.Google Scholar
Bastin, Marie-Louise. 1982. La sculpture tshokwe. Meudon: Alain et Francoise Chaffln.Google Scholar
Baumann, Hermann. 1935. Lunda. Berlin: Wurfel.Google Scholar
Beattie, J. H. M. 1955. ”Contemporary Trends in British Social Anthropology.” Sociologus 5. Reprint. 1971. Bobbs-Merrill Reprint Series in the Social Sciences, A–13, pp. 114.Google Scholar
Beier, Ulli. 1963. African Mud Sculpture. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beier, Ulli. 1982. Yoruba Beaded Crowns: Sacred Regalia of the Olokuku of Okuku. London: Ethnographica.Google Scholar
Ben-Amos, Paula. 1980. The Art of Benin. New York: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Berndt, Ronald M. 1958. ”Some Methodological Considerations in the Study of Australian Aboriginal Art.” Oceania 29: 2643.Google Scholar
Biebuyck, Daniel P. 1973. Lega Culture: Art, Initiation, and Moral Philosophy among a Central African People. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Biebuyck, Daniel P.. 1981. Statuary from the Pre-Bembe Hunters: Issues in the Interpretation of Ancestral Figurines from the Basikasingo-Bembe-Boyo. Tervuren: Museé royal de l'Afrique centrale.Google Scholar
Blier, Suzanne P. 1982. Gestures in African Art. New York: L. Kahan Gallery.Google Scholar
Blossfeldt, W. 1961. Formen afrikanischer Plastik. Stuttgart: Schuler Verlagsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Börrisson, C. N. 1925. Katalog och beskrivning över Sv. Missionsförb. missionsetnografiska vandringsmuseum från Kongo. Malmö: Handelstryckeriet.Google Scholar
Boser-Sarivaxevanis, Renée. 1972. Les tissus de l'Afrique occidentale. Basel: Pharos.Google Scholar
Boston, J. S. 1977. Ikenga Figurines. London: Ethnographica.Google Scholar
Brain, Robert. 1980. Art and Society in Africa. New York: Longman.Google Scholar
Brain, Robert and Pollock, Adam. 1971. Bangwa Funerary Sculpture. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Bravmann, René A. 1974. Islam and Tribal Art in West Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Calame-Griaule, Geneviève. 1965. Ethnologie et langage: La parole chez les Dogon. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Calame-Griaule, Geneviève. 1968. Dictionnaire (ethnologique et linguistique) dogon. Paris: Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Calame-Griaule, Geneviève. (ed.) 1977. Langage et cultures africaines: Essais d'ethnolinguistique. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Carter, Gwendolen M., and Paden, Ann. (eds.) 1969. Expanding Horizons in African Studies. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Chalmers, F. Graeme. 1973. ”The Study of Art in a Cultural Context.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32: 249–56.Google Scholar
Coart, E., and de Hauleville, A.. 1906. Notes analytiques sur les collections ethnographiques de Musée du Congo: La religion. Tervuren: Musée du Congo.Google Scholar
Cole, Herbert M. 1982. Mbari: Art and Life among the Owerri Igbo. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Cole, Herbert M. and Ross, Doran H.. 1977. The Arts of Ghana. Los Angeles: University of California.Google Scholar
Colloquim, First World Festival of Negro Arts, Dakar, April 1–24, 1966. 1966. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Cornet, Joseph. 1972. Art de l'Afrique noire au pays du fleuve Zaire. Brussels: Arcade.Google Scholar
Cornet, Joseph. 1982. Art royal kuba. Milan: Edizioni Sipiel.Google Scholar
Cory, Hans. 1956. African Figurines: Their Ceremonial Use in Puberty Rites in Tanganyika. London: Faber and Faber.Google Scholar
Crowley, Daniel J. 1958. ”Aesthetic Judgment and Cultural Relativism.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 17: 187–93.Google Scholar
Crowley, Daniel J.. 1966. ”An African Aesthetic.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 24: 519–24.Google Scholar
Dark, Philip J. C. 1973. An Introduction to Benin Art and Technology. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Dark, Philip J. C.. 1982. An Illustrated Catalogue of Benin Art. Boston: G. K. Hall.Google Scholar
d'Azevedo, Warren L. 1958. ”A Structural Approach to Esthetics: Toward a Definition of Art in Anthropology.” American Anthropologist 60: 702714.Google Scholar
d'Azevedo, Warren L.. (ed.) 1973. The Traditional Artist in African Societies. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
de Ganay, Solange. 1941. Les devises des Dogons. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
de Ganay, Solange. 1942. Le Binou Yébéné (culte des Dogons). Paris: Geuthner.Google Scholar
Delange, Jacqueline. 1967. Arts et peuples de l'Afrique noire. Paris: Gallimard. (Translated into English as The Art and Peoples of Black Africa. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1974.)Google Scholar
Denyer, Susan. 1978. African Traditional Architecture. New York: Africana.Google Scholar
de Sousberghe, Leon. 1958. L'art pende. Brussels: Beaux-Arts.Google Scholar
Dieterlen, Germaine. 1941. Les âmes des Dogon. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
Dieterlen, Germaine. 1959. ”Tendances de l'ethnologie française.” Cahiers internationaux de sociologie 27: 2326.Google Scholar
Dieterlen, Germaine. 1982. Le titre d'honneur. Paris: Musée de l'homme.Google Scholar
Drewal, H. and M., 1983. Gelede Masks: Art and Female Power among the Yoruba. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Eicher, Joanne B. 1976. Nigerian Handcrafted Textiles. Ile-Ife: University of Ife Press.Google Scholar
Einstein, Carl. 1915. Negerplastik. Munich: Kurt Wolff.Google Scholar
Eyo, Ekpo. 1977. Two Thousand Years of Nigerian Art. Lagos, Nigeria: Federal Department of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Etudes africaines en Europe: Bilan et inventaire. 1981. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Fagg, William. 1953. The Webster Plass Collection of African Art: The Catalogue of a Memorial Exhibition Held in the King Edward VII Galleries of the British Museum. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Fagg, William. 19551956. ”The Study of African Art,” pp. 458–73 in Simon, and Ottenberg, Phoebe (eds.) Cultures and Societies of Africa. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Fagg, William. 1966a. ”The Negro Arts: Preparing for the Dakar Festival.” Journal of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Art 114: 409425.Google Scholar
Fagg, William. 1966b. ”Tribality,” pp. 107119 in Colloquim, First World Festival of Negro Arts, Dakar, April 1–24, 1966. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Fagg, William and List, H.. 1963. Nigerian Images. London: Lund Humphries.Google Scholar
Fagg, William and Pemberton, John. 1982. Yoruba Sculpture of West Africa. New York: Pace Gallery.Google Scholar
Fagg, William and Picton, John. 1970. The Potter's Art in Africa. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Faris, James C. 1972. Nuba Personal Art. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Ferry, Marie-Paule. 1977. ”Les noms des hommes et des masques chez les Basari du Sénégal oriental,” pp. 8499 in Calame-Griaule, Genviève (ed.) Langage et cultures africaines: Essais d'ethnolinguistique. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Firth, Raymond. 1947. ”Social Problems and Research in British West Africa.” Africa 17: 77–91, 170–80.Google Scholar
Firth, Raymond. 1951. ”Contemporary British Social Anthropology.” American Anthropologist 53: 474–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischer, Eberhard, and Himmelheber, Hans. 1975. Das Gold in der Kunst Westafrikas. Zurich: Museum Rietberg.Google Scholar
Fischer, Eberhard, and Himmelheber, Hans. 1976. Die Kunst der Dan. Zurich: Museum Rietberg.Google Scholar
Fischer, Werner, and Zirngibl, Manfred A.. 1978. African Weapons. Passau: Prinz.Google Scholar
Fraser, Douglas and Cole, Herbert, (eds.) 1972. African Art and Leadership. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Fry, Jacqueline. 1978. Vingt-cinq sculptures afriacaines. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.Google Scholar
Gebauer, Paul. 1979. Art of Cameroon. Portland, Oregon: Portland Art Museum.Google Scholar
Gerbrands, A. A. 1956. Kunst als cultuur-element in het byzonder in Neger-Afrika. The Hague: Excelsior. (Translated into English as Art as an Element of Culture, Especially in Negro Africa. Leiden: Mededeelingen van het Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde, 1957.)Google Scholar
Germann, P. 1910. Das plastisch-figürliche Kunstgewerbe im Grasland von Kamerun. 4 vols. Leipzig: Museum für Volkerkunde.Google Scholar
Glaze, Anita J. 1981. Art and Death in a Senufo Village. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Gluckman, Max. 1956. ”Social Anthropology in Central Africa.” Rhodes-Livingstone Journal 20: 127.Google Scholar
Goldwater, Robert. 1964. Senufo Sculpture from West Africa. New York: Museum of Primitive Art.Google Scholar
Hôtel, Grand. 1928. Catalogue de la remarquable collection de feu Mr. Henry Pareyn d'Anvers de l'art nègre du Congo. Antwerp.Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel. 1933. ”Introduction méthodologique.” Minotaure, Number 2: 712.Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel. 1938a. Jeux dogons. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel. 1938b. Masques dogons. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel. 1947. Arts de l'Afrique noire. Paris: Editions du Chêne. (Translated as Folk Art of Black Africa. Paris and New York, 1950.)Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel. 1948. Dieu d'eau: Entretiens avec Ogotemmêli. Paris: Editions du Chêne. (Translated as Conversations with Ogotemmêli. London: Oxford University Press, 1965.)Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel and Dieterlen, Germaine. 1951. Signes graphiques soudanais. Paris: Hermann.Google Scholar
Griaule, Marcel and Dieterlen, Germaine. 1965. Le renard pâle. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
Guillaume, Paul, and Apollinaire, Guillaume. 1917. Sculptures nègres. Paris. Reprint. 1972. New York: Hacker Art Books.Google Scholar
Hanna, Judith Lynne. 1980. ”African Dance Research: Past, Present and Future.” African Journal 11: 3351.Google Scholar
Harley, George W. 1950. Masks as Agents of Social Control in Northern Liberia. Papers of the Peabody Museum, vol. 32, no. 2. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University.Google Scholar
Haselberger, Herta. 1964. Bautraditionen der Westafrikanischen Neger Kulturen: Eine Völkerkundliche Kunststudie. Vienna: Afro-Asiastisches Institut.Google Scholar
Hermann, Ferdinand, and Germann, Paul. 1958. Beiträge zur Afrikanischen Kunst. Berlin: Akademie Verlag.Google Scholar
Herskovits, Melville J. 1938. Dahomey: An Ancient West African Kingdom. Volume 2. New York: J. J. Augustin.Google Scholar
Herskovits, Melville J.. 1945. The Backgrounds of African Art. Denver: Art Museum. Reprint. 1967. New York: Biblo and Tannen.Google Scholar
Heydrich, M., and Fröhlich, M.. 1954. Plastik der Primitiven. Stuttgart: Verlag “Die Schönen Bucher.” Google Scholar
Himmelheber, Hans. 1935. Negerkünstler. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Himmelheber, Hans. 1960. Negerkunst und Negerkünstler. Braunschweig: Klinkhardt & Biermann.Google Scholar
Holas, Bohumil. 1952. Les masques kono. Paris: Librairie orientaliste Paul Geuthner.Google Scholar
Holas, Bohumil. 1964. Sculpture sénoufo. Limoges: A. Bontemps. 2d ed. 1969. Abidjan: Centre des sciences humaines.Google Scholar
Holas, Bohumil. 1966. Arts de la Côte d'Ivoire. 2d ed. Paris: Press univeritaires de France.Google Scholar
L'homme, hier et aujourd'hui, recueil d'études en hommage à André Leroi-Gourhan. 1973. Paris: Editions Cujas.Google Scholar
Horton, Robin. 1965. Kalahari Sculpture. Lagos: Department of Antiquities, Federal Republic of Nigeria.Google Scholar
Drouot, Hôtel. 1931. Collection G. De Miré: Sculptures anciennes d'Afrique et d'Amérique. Paris.Google Scholar
Huet, Michel. 1978. The Dance, Art and Ritual of Africa. New York: Pantheon Books.Google Scholar
Idiens, D. (ed.) 1980. Special Issue of Textile History. Volume II.Google Scholar
Imperato, Pascal J. 1978. Dogon Cliff Dweller: The Art of Mali's Mountain People. New York: L. Kahan Gallery.Google Scholar
Jefferson, Louise E. 1973. The Decorative Arts of Africa. New York: Viking Press.Google Scholar
Kjersmeier, Carl. 19351938. Centres de style de la sculpture nègre africaine. 4 vols. Paris and Copenhagen. Reprint (4 volumes in 1). 1967. New York: Hacker Art Books.Google Scholar
Laude, Jean. 1966. Les arts de l'Afrique noire. Paris: Librairie générale française. (Translated as The Arts of Black Africa. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1971.)Google Scholar
Laude, Jean. 1973. African Art of the Dogon: The Myths of the Cliff Dwellers. New York: Viking Press.Google Scholar
Laude, Jean. 1978. Introduction to Michel Huet The Dance, Art and Ritual of Africa. New York: Pantheon Books.Google Scholar
Leach, Edmund. 1982. Social Anthropology. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lebeuf, J. P. and Masson-Detourbet, A.. 1950. La civilisation du Tchad.Google Scholar
LeCoq, R. 1953. Les Bamiléke. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Lehuard, Raoul. 1974. Statuaire du Stanley-Pool. Villiers-le-Bel: Arts d'Afrique noire.Google Scholar
Lehuard, Raoul. 1980. Fétiches à clous du Bas-Zaire. Arnouville: Arts d'Afrique noire.Google Scholar
Leiris, Michel. 1948. La langue secrète des Dogons de Sanga. Paris: Institut d'ethnologie.Google Scholar
Leith-Ross, Sylvia. 1976. Nigerian Pottery: A Catalogue. Ibadan: University Press for the Department of Antiquities, Lagos.Google Scholar
Lem, H. 1948. Sculptures soudanaises. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques.Google Scholar
Le Moal, Guy. 1980. Les Bobo: Nature et fonction des masques. Paris: L'office de la recherche scientifique et technique outre-mer.Google Scholar
Leuzinger, Elsy. 1960. The Art of Africa: The Art of the Negro Peoples. New York: Crown Publishers.Google Scholar
Lima, Mesquitela. 1967. Os “Akixi” Mascarados do Nordeste de Angola. Lisbon: Museu do Dundo.Google Scholar
Lystad, Robert A. (ed.) 1965. The African World: A Survey of Social Research. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Maes, J. 1935. Fetischen of tooverbeelden uit Kongo. Tervuren: Musée du Congo belge.Google Scholar
Maes, J. and Lavachery, Henri. 1930. L'art nègre. Brussels and Paris: Librairie national d'art et d'histoire.Google Scholar
Maesen, Albert. 1959a. Arte Del Congo. Rome: De Luca.Google Scholar
Maesen, Albert. 1959b. ”Styles et expérience esthétique dans la plastique congolaise.” Problèmes d'Afrique centrale 44: 8496.Google Scholar
Maesen, Albert. 1960. Kunst fra Kongo. Udvalgt Blandi, Samlingerne 1. Tervuren: Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale.Google Scholar
Maesen, Albert. 1967. Art of the Congo. Minneapolis: Walker Art Center.Google Scholar
Maquet, Jacques. 1966. ”An Approach to a Sociology of Traditional Sculpture,” pp. 121–41 in Colloquim, First World Festival of Negro Arts, Dakar, April 1–24, 1966. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Maquet, Jacques. 1971. ”Introduction to Aesthetic Anthropology.” Addison-Wesley Module in Anthropology.Google Scholar
Marquart, J.; Schmeltz, J. D.; and De Jong, J. P. de Josselin. 19041913. Ethnographisch album van het stroomgebied van den Congo. The Hague: M. Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Martin, Phyllis, and O'Meara, Patrick. (eds.) 1977. Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Masui, Th. 1899. Les collections ethnographiques du Musée du Congo. Tervuren: Musée du Congo.Google Scholar
Menzel, Brigitte. 19721973. Textilien aus Westafrika. 3 volumes. Berlin: Museum für Völkerkunde.Google Scholar
Merriam, Alan P. 1964. ”The Arts and Anthropology,” pp. 224–36 in Tax, Sol (ed.) Horizons of Anthropology. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Meyer, Piet. 1981. Kunst und Religion der Lobi. Zurich: Museum Rietberg.Google Scholar
Mills, George. 1957. ”Art: An Introduction to Qualitative Anthropology.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16: 117.Google Scholar
Minotaure. 1933. Special Issue on Dakar-Djibouti Mission. Number 2. Paris.Google Scholar
Gangambi, Muyaga. 1974. Les masques pende de Gatundo. Bandundu: Centre d'êtudes ethnologiques.Google Scholar
Mumamuhega, Ndambi. 1975. Les masques pende de Ngudi. Bandundu: Centre d'êtudes ethnologiques.Google Scholar
Neyt, François. 1977. La grande statuaire hemba du Zaire. Louvain-la-Neuve: Institut supérieur d'archéologie et d'histoire de l'art.Google Scholar
Kibango, Ngolo. 1976. Mingami, danseurs de masques pende. Bandundu: Centre d'êtudes ethnologiques.Google Scholar
Nuoffer, Oskar. 1925. Afrikanische Plastik in der Gestaltung von Mutter und Kind. Dresden: Carl Reissner.Google Scholar
Olbrechts, Frans M. 1946. Plastiek van Kongo. Antwerp: N. V. Standaard. (Translated as Les arts plastiques du Congo belge. Brussels: Erasme, 1959.)Google Scholar
Olbrechts, Frans M. and Maesen, A.. 19371938. Tentoonstelling van Kongo_Kunst. Antwerp: Antwerpsche Propagandaweken.Google Scholar
Ottenberg, Simon. 1971. ”Anthropology and African Aesthetics.” Open Lecture Delivered at the University of Ghana, Legon, on 28th January 1971. Accra: Ghana Universities Press.Google Scholar
Ottenberg, Simon. 1975. Masked Rituals of Afikpo: The Context of an African Art. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Ottenberg, Simon. 1982. ”Illusion, Communication, and Psychology in West African Masquerades.” Ethnos 10: 149–85.Google Scholar
Ottenberg, Simon and Ottenberg, Phoebe. (eds.) 19551956. Cultures and Societies of Africa. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Paden, John, and Soja, Edward, (eds.) 1970. The African Experience. 2 volumes. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Paulme, Denise. 1940. Organisation sociale des Dogon. Paris: Editions Domat-Montchrestien.Google Scholar
Paulme, Denise. 1956. Les sculptures de l'Afrique noire. Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Paulme, Denise and Brosse, Jacques. 1956. Parures africaines. Paris: Hachette.Google Scholar
Perrois, Louis. 1973. ”Fondements d'une approche systématique des arts traditionnels,” pp. 279–86 in L'homme, hier et aujourd'hui, recueil d'études en hommage à André Leroi-Gourhan. 1973. Paris: Editions Cujas.Google Scholar
Picton, John and Mack, John. 1979. African Textiles: Looms, Weaving and Design. London: British Museum Publications.Google Scholar
africaine, Présence. 1951. L'art nègre. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Prussin, Labelle. 1969. Architecture in Northern Ghana: A Study of Forms and Functions. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rattray, R. S. 1927. Religion and Art in Ashanti. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Redinha, José. Máscaras e mascarados angolanos. Luanda: Imprensa national de Angola, 1965.Google Scholar
Richards, Audrey. 1953. ”Anthropological Research in East Africa.” Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences 15: 4449.Google Scholar
Richter, Dolores. 1980. Art, Economics, and Change: The Kulebele of Northern Ivory Coast. La Jolla, Cal.: Psych/Graphic Publishers.Google Scholar
Rubin, Arnold. 1974. African Accumulative Sculpture: Power and Display. New York: Pace Editions.Google Scholar
Sarevskaja, B. I. 1964. ”La Méthode de l'ethnographie de Marcel Griaule et les questions de méthodologie dans l'ethnographie française contemporaine.” Cahiers d'êtudes africaines 4: 590602.Google Scholar
Schweeger-Hefel, Annemarie. 1972. Die Kurumba von Lurum. Vienna: Schendl.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1962. ”The Arts and Their Changing Social Function.” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 96: 653–58.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1965. ”The Visual Arts,” pp. 442–51, 555–56 in Lystad, Robert (ed.) The African World: A Survey of Social Research. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1966. ”Report of Visual Arts Group.” ARC Conference on the African Arts, Indiana University, March 2526, 1966.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1972. African Textiles and Decorative Arts. New York: Museum of Modern Art.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1973. ”Approaches to Non-Western Art, pp. 425–34 in d'Azevedo, Warren L. (ed.) The Traditional Artist in African Societies. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1977. ”Traditional Arts of Black Africa,” pp. 221–42 in Martin, Phyllis and O'Meara, Patrick (eds.) Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1980. African Furniture and Household Objects. New York: American Federation of Arts.Google Scholar
Siegel, Bernard; Beals, Alan; and Tyler, Stephen, (eds.) 1979. Annual Review of Anthropology. Volume 9. Palo Alto, Cal.: Annual Reviews.Google Scholar
Silver, Harry R. 1979. ”Ethnoart,” pp. 267307 in Siegel, Bernard, Beals, Alan, and Tyler, Stephen (eds.) Annual Review of Anthropology. Volume 9. Palo Alto, Cal.: Annual Reviews.Google Scholar
Siroto, Leon. 1976. African Spirit Images and Identities. New York: Pace Primitive and Ancient Art.Google Scholar
Söderberg, Bertil. 1956. Les instruments de musique au Bas-Congo et dans les régions avoisinantes. Stockholm: Ethnographic Museum of Sweden.Google Scholar
Stevens, P. 1978. Stone Images of Esie. Nigeria: Ibadan University Press.Google Scholar
Sweeney, James Johnson. 1935. African Negro Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art.Google Scholar
Tax, Sol. (ed.) 1964. Horizons of Anthropology. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Tessmann, Günter. 1913. Die Pangwe. Völkerkundiche Monograaphie eines West-Afrikanischen Negerstammes. 2 volumes. Berlin: Ernst Wasmuth. Reprint (in 1 volume). 1972. New York: Johnson Reprint Corporation.Google Scholar
Theatre Arts Monthly. 1927. Blondiau-Theatre Arts Collection of Primitive African Art. New York: New Art Circle.Google Scholar
Thompson, Robert Farris. 1971. Black Gods and Kings: Yoruba Art at UCLA. Los Angeles: Museum and Laboratories of Ethnic Arts and Technology.Google Scholar
Thompson, Robert Farris. 1974. African Art in Motion: Icon and Act in the Collection of Katherine Coryton White. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Thompson, Robert Farris and Cornet, Joseph. 1981. The Four Moments of the Sun: Kongo Art in Two Worlds. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Togo-Cameroun. 1935. Special Issue on Exhibition at Museum of Ethnography, Palais du Trocodéro, of Labouret Expedition to Camerouns. Paris.Google Scholar
Torday, E., and Joyce, T. A.. 1911. Notes ethnographiques sur les peuples communément appelés Bakuba, ainsi que sur les peuplades apparentées–Les Bushongo. Tervuren: Musée du Congo belge.Google Scholar
Trowell, Margaret. 1960. African Design. London: Faber and Faber. 2d ed., 1966; 3d ed., 1971.Google Scholar
Turner, Victor. 1965. ”Some Current Trends in the Study of Ritual in Africa.” Anthropological Quarterly 38: 155–66.Google Scholar
Underwood, Leon. 1947. Figures in Wood of West Africa. London: A. Tiranti.Google Scholar
Underwood, Leon. 1948. Masks of West Africa. London: A. Tiranti.Google Scholar
Underwood, Leon. 1949. Bronzes of West Africa. London: A. Tiranti.Google Scholar
Vandenhoute, Jan. 1947. Afrikaanse Kunst in Nederland. Leiden: Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde.Google Scholar
Van Wing, J. 1921. Etudes bakongo. Histoire et sociologie. Brussels: Goemaere.Google Scholar
Van Wing, J.. 1938. Etudes bakongo. Religion et magie. Brussels: Institut royal colonial beige.Google Scholar
Vatter, Ernst. 1926. Religiöse Plastik der Naturvolker. Frankfurt-on-Main: Frankfurter Verlags Anstalt.Google Scholar
Vogel, Susan. 1980. African Sculpture: The Shape of Surprise. New York: C. W. Post Gallery.Google Scholar
von Luschan, E. 1919. Die Altertümer von Benin. 3 volumes. Berlin.Google Scholar
von Sydow, Eckart. 1930. Handbuch der Westafrikanischen Plastik. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer, Ernst Vohsen.Google Scholar
von Sydow, Eckart. 1932. Kunst der Naturvölker. Sammlung Baron Edouard van der Heydt. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer.Google Scholar
von Sydow, Eckart. 1954. Afrikanische Plastik aus dem Nachlass herausgegeben von Gerdt Kutscher. New York: George Wittenborn.Google Scholar
Warren, D. M., and Andrews, J. Kweku. 1977. An Ethnographie Approach to Akan Arts and Aesthetics. Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues.Google Scholar
Westerdijk, H. 1975. Ijzerwerk van Centraal-Afrika. Rotterdam: Museum voor Land- en Volkenkunde.Google Scholar
Widstrand, Carl G. 1958. African Axes. Uppsala: Almquist and Wiksells.Google Scholar
Willett, Frank. 1970. ”Visual Art in Africa,” pp. 108127 in Paden, John and Soja, Edward (eds.) The African Experience. Volume 1. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Willett, Frank. 1971. African Art: An Introduction. New York: Praeger Publishers.Google Scholar
Wingert, Paul. 1950. The Sculpture of Negro Africa. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Zahan, Dominique. 1960. Sociétés d'initiation bambara. Paris: Mouton.Google Scholar
Zahan, Dominique. 1980. Antilopes du soleil: arts et rites agrires d'Afrique noire. Vienna: A. Schendl.Google Scholar