LACMA home

Advanced Search
 
     
Browse African ArtAfrican Art  

The arts of Africa are as diverse in appearance, material, and purpose as the peoples of the continent that created them. The works in the collection include body adornments, masks with bright paint and raffia, small figures of wood and ivory, bronzes, beaded crowns, and stools. African artists create dynamic, original, and imaginative pieces from materials available locally and brought from a distance.

In the past Asante weavers took imported Asian silks, picked apart the cloth, and rewove it into multicolored kente cloth. Currently weavers use whatever fibers are commercially available, from polyesters to silk. Ndebele women make bright bands of imported beads that when worn, signify their marital state. Kuba men weave elegant textiles from Raffia fibers that are often grown in the weaver’s yard.

African artworks also reflect a broad range of political structures and belief systems. A bronze plaque from the Benin kingdom, formerly nailed to a palace wall, depicts a titled court official. Objects used in the divination process, like a Yoruba ifa tray, represent people’s desire to commune with ancestors and gods. Ritual figures used by Namchi women to encourage pregnancy reveal the importance of family.
 

 

Highlights from African Art

Browse African Art Collections online

Plaque  

Plaque, 17th century
Bronze
Height: 18 3/4 in. (47.6 cm)
M.74.90
Gift of Anna Bing Arnold
View this full artwork record



Divination Board for Ifa Priest  

Divination Board for Ifa Priest
Wood
Height: 10 1/2 in. (26.67 cm)
AC1993.218.3 (Study Collection)
Gift of Diane R. Wedner and Ronald M. Ziskin
View this full artwork record



Doll  

Doll, 20th century
Wood, nails, metal, and fiber
12 1/4 x 6 in. (31.12 x 15.24 cm)
M.2000.162.5 (Study Collection)
Anonymous gift
View this full artwork record

 
Archives Ways to Look at Art Teacher Resources Glossary Library Archives
Terms of Use Site Map Help Add Your Opinion