cover image: Female Impersonator's Costume

Female Impersonator's Costume

The Igbo people of southeastern Nigeria are known for their spectacular art forms, notably their masquerades. While museum often show masks without the matching dress, here we have a costume lacking the wooden mask with an elaborate hairstyle. During a festival called "The Fame of Maidens," male dancers would embody the ideals of youthful feminine beauty through their masks, costumes, and movements. The costume has woven breasts and a naval attached to it. The applique designs in vivid colors refer to female body ornamentation, traditionally a combination of scarification and body paint. Beauty, for the Igbo, refers to physical and moral characteristics, and the dead maidens who are honored during the festival personify both.
Date published
20th century
Format
Cotton, jute, wool, rayon, applique, and embroidery
Pages
60 x 67in. (152.4 x 170.2cm)
Place Discussed
Nigeria
Provider
Minnesota Digital Library
Published in
Nigeria
Source
Digital Public Library of America https://dp.la/item/797783478e8a16548c37acaefa27600a