Saints, Spirits, and Strangers: Masks from Malawi. November 2 - December 1, 2001
The Maravi peoples, who comprise three main mask-producing groups (Chewa, Nyanja, and Manganja), have been settled in the region of Malawi since at least 1550. Masks were made by the mens' secret society, called Nyau, to which all men belonged. Nyau is thought to have existed for several centuries among the Chewa, the senior branch of the Maravi, before spreading to the southernmost Maravi, the Mang'anja, after 1875. The majority of the masks on exhibition were collected in the Chewa heartland between the 1950s and early 1980s, but made considerably earlier.
During the mid-1800s, the Maravi peoples were invaded by the warlike Ngoni, who fled Shaka's Zulu Kingdom in South Africa, and by Muslim slave traders, who decimated and depopulated the region. In the 1860s David Livingston estimated that 19,000 slaves from Malawi were exported from Zanzibar each year, and it is estimated that a far larger number of captives died annually in the caravans bound for the coast. The missionaries who followed in Livingstone's footsteps established a strong foothold in Malawi. Christianity was a mixed blessing, because it combated both slavery and indigenous tradition. As Christianity made inroads, particularly in the 20th century, men refused to join Nyau, and compulsory membership could no longer be enforced.
Among Maravi, men governed the spiritual realm of death and the ancestors through Nyau, while women controlled life and regeneration. The Nyau Society performed both wooden and ephemeral masks during initiations, funerals, and at certain other important events. Nyau performances allowed the worlds of the living and the dead to interact during several days of festivities. Rules governed when each mask appeared, and the movements and songs it performed. All of these rules and the making and storage of the masks were strictly secret.
Masks of old men, ancestors, and spirits represent ideal qualities, such as wisdom, and themes relating to sickness, death, and the ancestral realm. In contrast, undesirable behaviors are caricatured through representations of outsiders. These strangers include British authorities, Muslim slavers and traders, white women (called Dona), Ngoni invaders, and characters who epitomize foreign values, such as Elvis Presley and Charlie Chaplin, who represents American Peace Corps volunteers. Such Christian characters as Simoni (Simon), Maliya (Maria or Virgin Mary), and the Devil contrast Christian values with the ancestral spirituality of Nyau. The nature of spirit is, however, ambiguous, and what is negative in one context can be positive in another. All of these masks are included in this exhibition.
Few Nyau masks exist in collections. Several factors account for their rarity. Nyau was so secret that it escaped the attention of early explorers and collectors. Later, the British colonial authorities banned Nyau because they mistakenly believed it underpinned chiefly power. The treasured wooden masks were rarely soldÑthey were costly to commission and earned their owners high rental fees. Their colored surfaces, periodically anointed with paint, often over several generations, and their numerous additions also unsettle Western stereotypes about African art.
Consequently, little has been written about Nyau masks, although they reveal fascinating similarities with the masks of the Makonde and Chokwe peoples, and with the Luba, from whom the Chewa trace their origins.
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all i have is my word,and i dont break it for nobody.
there is no better place than home,dont you just love to reminiscie and appreciate our rich culture thats been up rooted and misinterpretted by the west as heathen and archaic,these masks are skillfully and artistically sculpted from tree trunks and depicts the truest form of talent on the brink of extinction.just picture the makanja and chilembwe or maria during indepence celebrations,imagine its beauty and splendour,remember the njedzas and kamanos, oh!! what a beauty my eye sight beheld.
i know we cant live in the past but we can revisit it,maintain it and uphold it for as long as we live.it looks like i've just reminded you about your identity before you left the motherland,were you makanja or chilembwe?please tell me.
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all i have is my word,and i dont break it for nobody.
As much as we srgue about all things "faith" I agree with your sentiments here. It's a shame when you go to the museums here and see how the British worship and promote their pasts while ridiculing our African heritage as primitive and heathen. Heathen being a christian derived word. That is one of the reasons I am opposed to Christianity. It is the MAIN reason or way in which our history has been successfully wiped off.
I love African art. Not only because it reflects our cultural heritage but also you can't deny the links to everything from hip-hop to the blues to most popular culture today.
The ingenuity of African art is so evident so beautiful to look at. It's sad that it takes living outside to really appreciate Africa and its rich heritage...
Forgive me for not sharing your passionate longing to participate in such festivities. When I look at those artifacts, I'm reminded of aNyau aku Mangochi, where they would perform at the hotels for those same white people's money. Though, there was alot of symbolism, meanings and stories, along with the dancing, the fact that I could walk up, unmask him and take a picture, totally distorts this idea of a so-called secret society. And to my dismay, a similar scenario of that manner actually did happen.
I remember someone telling me that I was not trully an African, because I did not own a daishiki. Unlike the above sentiments, I don't feel the need to dress in african attire, study artifacts or do anything relating to chewa heritage to remind me of my identity. I guess you could say I wear my daishiki and Nyau mask on the inside, as cheesy as that may sound.
Nevertheless, I, just like you my fellow countrymen, miss home too. And I think that is the real issue, rather than appearing to be amazed by these masks.
The person who accused you of not being a true African because you didn't own a dashiki has no idea that Africa is a continent and not a country. And that every square km of African land has a diversity of it's own. In fact the dashiki isn't even traditionally African per se. But a kind of westernised version of Ethiopian attire and Ghanaian.
Well the reason why they dance for white people is because you Africans would rather go watch some idiotic rapper or reggae wannabe than watch anything African. The gotta make a living you know...
It's okay not to feel the need to dress up in African clothing just don't diss it or cuss those that have it as an interest...
let me correct you on one thing,you are acting like a dumb child who up to now does not know that santa clause doesnt exist,the fact that in mangochi people unmasked you when you was a nyau does not distort the whole idea of its secrecy,people in the central region still treat nyau as spirits and still represents society according to the status quo.thats why dambwe is often situated in the graveyard or some thick bush with scary myths sorrounding it.dont get offended my friend but people who wear nyau are celebrities in their own respect.
just find these people at their after show parties,they woo women or have women throwing themselves at them because someone was makanja,its pure fun if you look at it from their perspective.on the fact of you dressing in some dashiki or do anything relating to your culture,i guess,your skin colour separates you from the rest,remember peter tosh said;no matter where you come from,as long you are a black man,you are an african.
ndithudi agule.
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all i have is my word,and i dont break it for nobody.
yeah, rap and reggae most certainly are becoming popular in Malawi. It only takes a quick scan through this site's audio section to see how Malawians have creatively incorporated both artforms into Malawian themes and have given a sort of Malawian style to it. Though the only ones I'm familiar with from the site are the real elements, there seems to be prospects for alot of these artists.
game
I suppose the reason why I don't take the Nyau tridition as seriously is because they are featured too frequently at the hotels. And seldom do you find them performing elsewhere. One gets the impression they are a supplementary to our hotel systems, rather than a representation of society or a status quo. But Since, ndi agule azibale anu, and I might not have any recollection about this time you make refference to, I'll be considerate enough to accept that some people actually regard this chewa myth as a sacred thing. It must have been way back though.
suppose the reason why I don't take the Nyau tridition as seriously is because they are featured too frequently at the hotels
skills,
do you read your postings sometimes?no offence comrade but you seem to ignore the fact that malawi's tourism industry can use the nyaus to attract tourists which boosts our economy someway somehow,the same way most chinese tourists come to england to see the buckingham palace or just to taste the english breakfast of bacon,egg and baked beans with toast.
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all i have is my word,and i dont break it for nobody.
I'm not denying the role you, Mr Nyau, have played as a cog in the tourism machine. My point is simply this. If indeed it were held in the festive manne you described then It would truely be a representation of contemporary Malawian society. However, you will never see him in our communities. He no longer embodies the chewa heritage; instead he has become part and parcel of the Malawian hotel experience.
skillz who is mr gule you or game. you seem to be angry at the loss of value of vilombo. mind zammahotela ndizolenga zocheza zenizeni zimapezeka mmaliro agule and zimakhala nyau proper kapoli ndi ija imayenda bwamuswe woijaja kukhala bebi yake yapa deni you know what i mean?