All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Mask in Ceremony: A Face That Holds More Than One Person

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, ethics, citizenship, language
Core question How does a piece of carved wood become more than carved wood — and what do the masks of West Africa teach us about the line between an object and what it holds?
Dogon mask dancers in Mali. The masks are tall, elaborate, and worn in real ceremonies — not as costume, but as spirits or ancestors taking form for the time of the dance. Photo: Fasokan / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
Introduction

In a village square somewhere in West Africa, a group of dancers is preparing. They are putting on costumes that cover their entire bodies — long fibre skirts, decorated tunics, gloves. The most important thing they put on is the mask. The mask covers the head and sometimes the shoulders. It is carved from wood, often by a specific carver who is part of a long tradition. It might have horns, or a long jaw, or rows of cowrie shells. Each mask has a name. Each mask has a story. Each mask is connected to a specific spirit, ancestor, or idea. When the dancer puts on the mask, something changes. In the tradition of the community, the dancer is no longer just a person. They are now a vessel for whatever the mask carries — an ancestor visiting from the world of the dead, a spirit that protects the village, a moral idea taking form. The drumming starts. The dancers move. The community watches. The ceremony might mark a funeral, an initiation, a planting season, a healing. When the ceremony ends and the masks come off, the dancers go back to being themselves. The masks are returned to their special place — often a sacred house or shrine. They are not toys. They are not decorations. They are not even, simply, art. This lesson asks how this works, who makes the masks, and what happens when these sacred objects travel out of their home communities into museums and tourist shops on the other side of the world.

The object
Origin
West Africa, with hundreds of distinct mask traditions across many peoples — including the Dogon (Mali), Dan (Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire), Yoruba (Nigeria and Benin), Bambara (Mali), Senufo (Côte d'Ivoire and Mali), Mende (Sierra Leone), Bamileke (Cameroon), and many more.
Period
Mask traditions across West Africa go back hundreds of years and likely much longer. Most are still practised today, with active mask makers and ceremonies in the home regions.
Made of
Most often carved from wood, sometimes with bronze or other metal additions. Decorated with cowrie shells, beads, plant fibres, animal hair, pigments, kaolin (white clay), and many other materials. Each tradition has its own preferred materials and styles.
Size
Varies enormously. Small face masks may be 30 cm tall. Large mask-and-headdress combinations can be over 2 metres tall. Some helmet masks completely cover the wearer's head and shoulders.
Number of objects
Many tens of thousands of historical masks survive in West African communities, in private hands worldwide, and in museums. Many thousands more are made each year by current artists.
Where it is now
Active masks are with the communities that use them, often kept in special houses or shrines. Many historical masks are in European and American museums, often taken during colonial periods. Repatriation conversations are ongoing.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. West African mask traditions are diverse and specific. How will you respect this variety rather than collapsing it into one 'African' tradition?
  2. Many masks in Western museums were taken during colonial periods. How will you handle the repatriation question with the seriousness it deserves?
  3. Masks are often sacred objects. How will you teach this with the respect we would give to any sacred tradition?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a Dogon village in Mali, in the lands below the Bandiagara escarpment. A funeral is being held — but not for one person. Among the Dogon, a major ceremony called dama is held every 12 years for everyone in the community who has died in the previous cycle. The ceremony helps the dead pass safely from the world of the living to the world of the ancestors. During the dama, masked dancers perform. They wear masks that have been kept hidden in sacred houses called toguna. Some masks are tall and house-shaped (the kanaga). Some are shaped like animals — antelopes, hyenas, monkeys. Some represent specific characters — old women, hunters, foreign traders. Each mask has its own dance, its own song, its own story. While the dancer wears the mask, the community treats them as the figure the mask represents. Not pretending. Real, for the time of the dance. Why might a community treat a person in a mask differently from a person without one?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the mask, in the tradition, does something more than disguise. The mask is believed to carry the spirit, ancestor, or idea it represents. While the dancer wears the mask, the community is not interacting with the dancer — they are interacting with the spirit. This is similar to how Catholics might treat the bread of the Eucharist as the body of Christ during the Mass, or how Hindus might treat a temple statue as a real presence of a god while it is being worshipped. The object becomes a vessel. The Dogon and many other West African peoples have careful rules about who can carve masks, who can wear them, when they come out of the sacred house, and what they should not be used for. These rules protect the meaning. A mask used without ceremony is just wood. A mask used in ceremony is a doorway. Students should see that this is not 'primitive' or 'superstitious'. It is a precise religious idea, similar to many in other traditions. The fact that the mask is wood does not stop it from being something else as well, while it is being used in the right way.

2
There is no single 'African mask'. There are hundreds of distinct traditions across West Africa, each from a specific people. The Dan masks of Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire are typically smaller, with calm beautiful faces. The Yoruba Gelede masks of Nigeria and Benin sit on top of the head and represent female ancestral power. The Senufo Kpelie masks of Côte d'Ivoire have small carved figures rising from the top. The Bambara Chiwara of Mali represents an antelope spirit who taught humans to farm. The Bamileke masks of Cameroon are big helmet masks decorated with thousands of beads. Many more. Each tradition has its own carving style, its own materials, its own ceremonies, its own rules about who can wear the mask. Why is it important to know these differences?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because lumping all African mask traditions together — which museum displays often do — erases the specific meaning of each one. A Dan mask and a Yoruba mask are as different from each other as a Greek statue and a Chinese ink painting. Calling them all 'African mask' is like calling all European art 'European painting'. It is a category that obscures more than it reveals. Specific knowledge is part of basic respect. Students should learn at least a few specific names — Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara — even if they cannot identify which mask is which. The variety is part of the riches of West Africa. There are over 1,000 distinct ethnic and linguistic groups across the continent. Their mask traditions reflect this diversity. Knowing this is part of seeing West Africa as a real place with real specific cultures, not as a vague 'tribal' category. End the discovery on this note: specificity is respect. Generalisation is sometimes erasure.

3
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, European colonial powers ruled most of West Africa. During this period, many sacred masks were taken from their communities and sent to European museums and private collections. Some were taken by force during colonial wars. Some were bought cheaply or through unfair pressure. Some were sold during periods of poverty or hardship. Some were given as gifts that the community did not fully consent to. Today, major collections of West African masks are in the British Museum, the Louvre's Musée du quai Branly in Paris, the Smithsonian, the Tervuren museum in Belgium (filled with masks from the colonial Belgian Congo), and many others. In recent years, some museums have begun to return masks to the communities they came from. The conversation is ongoing. What is happening here?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A long, slow, painful process of acknowledgement and return. The taking of African sacred objects during the colonial period was widespread and often violent. The Benin Bronzes are the most famous example, but masks were taken in even larger numbers. The communities that lost the masks did not stop existing. They are still here. Some of them have been asking for their masks back for over 100 years. In recent years, some museums have begun to listen. France committed in 2017 to return many African artworks. Several major institutions have made specific returns. Others are slower or have refused. The arguments are complicated: museums say they preserve the objects and make them accessible to global audiences. Communities say the objects belong to them, that they are still sacred, that 'preservation' in a foreign museum is not the same as living use at home. Both sides have real points. The trend is toward more returns, but the work is far from finished. Students should see that this is a real ongoing question, with real consequences for real communities. The masks in their museums are not just art. They are pieces of someone else's living tradition. End the discovery here. The conversation continues. The masks wait.

4
In West African home communities today, mask traditions are very much alive. Master carvers continue to make masks for ceremonies. Young people are initiated into the traditions. New masks are made for new occasions. Some traditions have changed — for example, some communities now allow tourist photography of certain ceremonies, while protecting others as private. Some communities make 'tourist masks' for sale, separate from the sacred masks used in ceremony. Many Africans worry about the loss of these traditions to globalisation, urbanisation, and religious change (some Christian and Muslim communities discourage mask traditions as competing with monotheistic faith). Others see mask traditions adapting and surviving in new forms. Is the West African mask tradition healthy today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Mixed answer. Some traditions are very healthy — the Yoruba Gelede tradition in Nigeria is recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage. The Dogon mask traditions are still practised in Mali, though tourism and conflict have affected them. The Dan mask traditions in Liberia continue, though the country's civil wars (1989-2003) damaged many communities. Other traditions have weakened. Christianity and Islam have both grown across West Africa, and some new converts have rejected mask traditions. Urbanisation has moved young people away from villages where these traditions live. Climate change and conflict have displaced communities. At the same time, many communities are working to keep their traditions alive — through formal cultural organisations, through teaching young people, through partnerships with museums (some on better terms than the colonial-era takings). The mask traditions of West Africa are not gone. They are not all healthy. They are alive in specific places, in specific ways, with specific challenges. Students should see that 'tradition' is not static. It is being negotiated every year by the people who carry it. The masks of West Africa are part of one of the world's largest networks of living religious and artistic traditions. End the lesson here. The masks are still being carved. The dances are still being danced. The communities are still here.

What this object teaches

West African ceremonial masks are sacred objects used in religious and community ceremonies across many distinct peoples of West Africa — including the Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, Senufo, Mende, Bamileke, and many others. Each tradition has its own style, materials, and meanings. Most masks are carved from wood and decorated with shells, fibres, beads, pigments, and other materials. While being worn in ceremony, the mask is often believed to carry a spirit, ancestor, or idea — the dancer becomes the vessel for what the mask represents. Specific rules govern who can carve, wear, and even see the masks. Many masks were taken from their home communities during the colonial period and now sit in European and American museums; conversations about return are ongoing. Mask traditions are still alive today across West Africa, with active master carvers and ongoing ceremonies, though some traditions have been weakened by religious change, urbanisation, and conflict. The mask is not just art. It is a living religious and cultural object connecting communities to their ancestors and spiritual world.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Is there one 'African mask' tradition?YesNo — there are hundreds of distinct traditions, each from a specific people with specific meanings
What is a mask while it is being worn?Just costumeIn the tradition, often a vessel for a spirit, ancestor, or idea — the dancer becomes the figure
Where are most West African masks today?In AfricaMany are in European and American museums, taken during the colonial period. Returns are happening but slowly.
Are mask traditions still alive?NoYes — master carvers and active ceremonies continue across West Africa today, though some traditions face challenges
Can anyone wear a sacred mask?YesNo — most traditions restrict mask wearing to specific people, often initiated men, sometimes specific lineages
Key words
Ceremonial mask
A mask made for use in religious or community ceremonies, usually believed to carry a spirit, ancestor, or idea while being worn. Different from a costume mask, decorative mask, or tourist mask.
Example: A Dogon kanaga mask is used in funeral ceremonies to help the dead pass to the world of the ancestors. It is not used at any other time.
Dogon
A people of Mali, living mainly along and below the Bandiagara escarpment. Famous for their mask traditions, their cliff villages, and their detailed cosmology. About 600,000 Dogon people today.
Example: The Dogon dama ceremony, held every 12 years, uses dozens of different mask types to mark the deaths in the community over the previous cycle.
Dan
A people of Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast). Dan masks are typically smaller, with calm beautiful faces. Used in initiation, judgement, and entertainment ceremonies. About 600,000 Dan people today.
Example: The Dan deangle mask, with its smooth and calm features, is used in male initiation ceremonies. The mask represents the female ancestral spirit.
Yoruba
A people of Nigeria, Benin, and Togo. The Yoruba have several mask traditions, including the Gelede tradition, which is recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. About 50 million Yoruba people today.
Example: The Yoruba Gelede mask, worn on top of the head, honours female ancestors and 'mothers' — the powerful older women whose blessing the community needs.
Initiation
A formal process by which a young person becomes a full member of a community or specific group. Many West African mask traditions are connected to initiation ceremonies, especially for boys becoming men.
Example: Among the Dan, mask traditions are tied to the Poro society. Boys go through initiation rituals where masks teach them about adulthood and community responsibility.
Repatriation
The return of an object — or sometimes a person's remains — to the community it came from. Many African ceremonial masks taken during the colonial period are now subjects of ongoing repatriation discussions.
Example: In 2021, France returned 26 royal artefacts to Benin, including masks and statues taken during the 1892 colonial sacking of Abomey. More returns from various museums have followed.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a map of West Africa, mark the home regions of major mask traditions: Dogon (Mali), Dan (Liberia, Côte d'Ivoire), Yoruba (Nigeria, Benin), Bambara (Mali), Senufo (Côte d'Ivoire), Mende (Sierra Leone), Bamileke (Cameroon). Each is a specific place with specific people.
  • History: Build a class timeline of African mask collecting in the West: early colonial taking (late 1800s), peak collecting period (1900-1960), independence and beginning of return demands (1960s onwards), recent major returns (Benin Bronzes 2021, others ongoing).
  • Ethics: Hold a calm class discussion: 'Should sacred objects be returned from museums to the communities they came from?' Use West African masks as one starting point. The Benin Bronzes lesson sets up similar questions; the masks are part of the same wider conversation.
  • Art: Look at images of masks from different West African traditions. Each student tries to identify what makes each style distinct — the shape, the materials, the decoration. Then each student designs an imagined mask for an imagined tradition of their own. The mask should mean something specific.
  • Citizenship: Mask traditions in West Africa face many pressures today: urbanisation, religious change, conflict, climate change, the loss of master carvers. Discuss what helps a tradition survive. The Japanese tea ceremony lesson covers some of the same questions.
  • Language: Many West African mask names come from specific languages — kanaga (Dogon), deangle (Dan), Gelede (Yoruba). Discuss how each language has words for things that other languages do not. The names of masks are part of the masks themselves.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

There is one 'African mask' tradition.

Right

There are hundreds of distinct mask traditions across West Africa, each from a specific people. The Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, and others have their own styles, meanings, and rules. Lumping them all together is one of the most common errors.

Why

This matters because each tradition is real and specific. 'African mask' is a category of generalisation, not a real cultural object.

Wrong

A mask is just art or just costume.

Right

In the home tradition, a mask in ceremony is often believed to carry a spirit, ancestor, or idea. The dancer becomes a vessel for what the mask represents. This is a precise religious idea, similar to many in other traditions.

Why

Reducing the mask to art or costume misses what it actually is in its home community. The mask is more than wood while it is being used in the right way.

Wrong

Mask traditions are dead or dying.

Right

Master carvers and active ceremonies continue across West Africa today. Some traditions face challenges from urbanisation, religious change, and conflict. Others, like the Yoruba Gelede tradition, are recognised by UNESCO and actively maintained.

Why

'Dying' is what outsiders sometimes say about traditions they cannot see in their own neighbourhoods. The traditions are alive, with their own challenges and adaptations.

Wrong

Masks in Western museums were all donated or fairly bought.

Right

Many were taken during colonial periods — sometimes by force during colonial wars, sometimes through unfair pressure or sales under hardship. Returning these objects to their communities is now a major ongoing conversation.

Why

This matters because the museums' collections were built in specific historical conditions. Honest education names this honestly.

Teaching this with care

Treat West African mask traditions as living religious and cultural practices. Use specific names — Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, Senufo, Mende, Bamileke — rather than the generic 'African'. Avoid 'tribal' as a default; 'people', 'nation', or 'community' are more current. Do not present mask traditions as 'primitive', 'superstitious', or 'pagan'; they are sophisticated religious and artistic traditions, comparable to any in the world. Be honest about colonial taking without making the lesson into pure indictment of Western museums — the museums have done some preservation work, even if often in problematic conditions, and the conversation about return is genuinely complicated. The Benin Bronzes lesson covers similar territory; the West African mask lesson is part of the same wider question. Avoid showing images that might be sacred-restricted — many West African traditions have rules about who can see masks (sometimes only initiated men). The image used in this lesson shows a public ceremony where outsiders are permitted; lessons should not display photographs of secret or restricted ceremonies. Be respectful of religious change in West Africa: many West Africans today are Christian or Muslim and may have complicated relationships with traditional mask practices. Do not present this as 'authentic Africa' versus 'corrupted modern Africa' — both traditional and monotheistic religious practices are part of contemporary West African life. If you have students of West African heritage, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Avoid mixing this lesson with general 'African art' framings — the masks are specific religious and cultural objects, not generic 'tribal art'. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The masks are still being carved. The dances are still being danced. The communities are still here.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about West African ceremonial masks.

  1. Why is it wrong to talk about 'the African mask tradition'?

    There are hundreds of distinct mask traditions across West Africa, each from a specific people with specific meanings — Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, and many more. Lumping them all together erases the specific traditions.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the variety and gives at least one or two specific examples.
  2. What is a mask believed to be while it is being worn in ceremony?

    In many traditions, a vessel for a spirit, ancestor, or idea. The dancer becomes the figure the mask represents. This is a precise religious idea, not just costume or pretending.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the religious meaning and the difference from costume. Either is enough for partial credit.
  3. Why are many West African masks today in European and American museums?

    Many were taken during the colonial period — sometimes by force during colonial wars, sometimes through unfair pressure or sales under hardship. The communities did not always freely give the masks they have lost.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the colonial origin of many museum collections. The point is that this was not simple donation.
  4. What is happening with the question of returning masks to West African communities?

    Some museums have begun to return masks to the communities they came from. France committed in 2017 to return many African artworks. Several major institutions have made specific returns since. The conversation is ongoing and not yet finished.
    Marking note: Strong answers will recognise that this is an ongoing process. Specific examples are a bonus.
  5. Are West African mask traditions still alive?

    Yes — master carvers continue to make masks, and active ceremonies continue across West Africa. Some traditions face challenges from urbanisation, religious change, and conflict. Others, like the Yoruba Gelede tradition, are recognised by UNESCO. The traditions are alive, with their own challenges.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises that the traditions are alive while acknowledging real challenges.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. In your culture or family, are there objects that mean more than they look — that carry something beyond their material?

    This is a personal question. Students may suggest religious objects (crosses, prayer beads, statues), family heirlooms, wedding rings, sports trophies, particular pieces of jewellery, even photographs. The deeper point is that 'object that carries meaning' is a universal human idea. The West African mask is one specific example. Many cultures have similar things. Once students recognise this in their own lives, they can recognise it in others.
  2. Should sacred masks taken during the colonial period be returned to the communities they came from?

    This is a real, current question. Students may say yes — the masks belong to the communities. Others may worry about practical questions: where would the masks go, would they be safe, would they be lost. Strong answers will see that thoughtful people on both sides of this debate exist, and that 'either-or' answers usually miss the complexity. Some objects have been returned successfully; others have not. End by saying that this is a real ongoing debate that will continue throughout your students' lifetimes.
  3. In some West African traditions, only certain people are allowed to wear or even see certain masks. What do you think of this kind of restriction?

    Push students past quick answers. Some will say 'everyone should be able to see everything'. Others will see that traditions have their own internal rules, and outsiders should not impose their values. Strong answers will see that 'public information' is a relatively modern Western idea. Many cultures have always had careful rules about who can know what, often connected to learning, age, gender, or initiation. Respect for a tradition includes respecting its rules about who is part of it. The mask is not less real because it is restricted. It is more real.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'When does an object stop being just an object and become something more?' Take guesses. Then say: 'In many West African traditions, a piece of carved wood becomes more than wood when it is worn in a ceremony. We are going to find out how.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe West African ceremonial masks: carved wooden masks, used in real ceremonies, often believed to carry a spirit or ancestor. Hundreds of distinct traditions across many peoples — Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, and others. Pause and ask: 'Why might one tradition treat a person in a mask differently from a person without one?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of vessel and presence.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) There is one 'African mask' tradition. (2) A mask is just art or costume. (3) Mask traditions are dead or dying. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — there are hundreds of specific traditions; the mask in ceremony is often a vessel for a spirit; mask traditions are alive today. End by asking: 'Why might these wrong stories spread?'
  4. THE NAMING ACTIVITY (10 min)
    On the board, write five mask names: Dogon kanaga, Dan deangle, Yoruba Gelede, Bambara Chiwara, Senufo Kpelie. Each represents a different specific tradition. In small groups, students pick one and (using whatever resources are available, including imagination if no resources are at hand) try to find or imagine what each mask might look like and what it might be for. Discuss: each name belongs to a real tradition. Generic 'African mask' covers all of these and many more.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'If a sacred object from your community ended up in a museum on the other side of the world, what would you want to happen?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Across West Africa today, many people are asking exactly that question. Their masks are in museums in Paris, London, Brussels, Washington. The conversations about return are just beginning. The masks are still sacred to the communities. The question of where they belong is one of the live ethical questions of our time.'
Classroom materials
The Mask Map
Instructions: On a map of West Africa drawn on the board, mark the home regions of major mask traditions: Dogon (Mali), Dan (Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire), Yoruba (Nigeria and Benin), Bambara (Mali), Senufo (Côte d'Ivoire), Mende (Sierra Leone), Bamileke (Cameroon). Discuss: each is a specific place. Each has its own people, language, and traditions. The map shows the variety that 'African mask' usually hides.
Example: In Mr Diallo's class, students were surprised at how many distinct traditions are packed into West Africa. The teacher said: 'Look at this. Each name is a real people with their own language. Mali alone has the Dogon, the Bambara, the Tuareg, and many others. Each has its own mask traditions. When someone says 'African mask', they are saying about 100 different things at once. Knowing this is a small piece of basic respect.'
What the Mask Carries
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'In your culture or family, are there objects that mean more than they look — that carry something beyond their material?' Examples might include religious objects, family heirlooms, wedding rings, photographs of people who have died. Each group shares two examples. Discuss: 'object that carries meaning' is a universal human idea. The West African mask is one specific example.
Example: In one class, students named: a grandmother's wedding ring, a Bible used by an ancestor, a small statue from a religious shrine, a photograph kept by the front door, a tooth left in a special box. The teacher said: 'You have just listed objects that carry meaning beyond their material. Each one is more than what it looks like. The West African mask is the same kind of object. The tradition has worked out, over centuries, a careful way to let the carrying happen.'
Whose Mask?
Instructions: In small groups, students role-play a museum board considering whether to return a Dogon mask to Mali. Some take the role of community elders asking for return. Some take the role of the museum, with arguments about preservation and access. Some take the role of a neutral mediator. After 15 minutes, each group shares the resolution they reached. Discuss: this is a real conversation happening right now in many museums. The arguments are real. The answers are still being worked out.
Example: In Mrs Traoré's class, the role-play resulted in three different conclusions in three different groups: full return, partial return with replicas left in the museum, and a long-term loan with shared ownership. The teacher said: 'You have just done what real museum directors and African community leaders are doing right now. The conversations are difficult. The answers are not the same in every case. The masks are still being talked about. Some have been returned. Some have not. The debate will be ongoing throughout your lives.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Benin Bronzes for another West African heritage object with a strong repatriation story. The two complement each other.
  • Try a lesson on kente cloth for another West African tradition with both deep meaning and global reach.
  • Try a lesson on the Asante gold weight for another West African artistic tradition with global circulation.
  • Connect this lesson to ethics class with a longer discussion of repatriation. The masks are part of a much larger conversation about sacred objects in foreign collections.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on how different cultures have used masks. Many cultures have mask traditions — Japanese Noh, Greek theatre, Venetian carnival, Inuit dance masks, and many more.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a discussion of cultural rights and how international institutions protect them. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage status, repatriation laws, indigenous rights — all connect.
Key takeaways
  • West African ceremonial masks are sacred objects used in real religious and community ceremonies. They are not just art or costume.
  • There are hundreds of distinct mask traditions across West Africa — Dogon, Dan, Yoruba, Bambara, Senufo, Mende, Bamileke, and many more — each with specific styles, meanings, and rules.
  • While being worn in ceremony, the mask is often believed to carry a spirit, ancestor, or idea. The dancer becomes the vessel for what the mask represents.
  • Specific rules govern who can carve, wear, and even see the masks. These rules are part of how the tradition protects its meaning.
  • Many West African masks were taken from their home communities during the colonial period. Returns are happening, but slowly. The conversation continues.
  • Mask traditions are alive today across West Africa. Master carvers continue to work. Ceremonies continue. The traditions face challenges, but they are not gone.
Sources
  • African Art in Cultural Perspective — William Bascom (1973) [academic]
  • Masks: Faces of Culture — John W. Nunley and Cara McCarty (1999) [academic]
  • The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitution — Dan Hicks (2020) [academic]
  • France returns African art (news report) — BBC News (2021) [news]
  • UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity (Yoruba Gelede) — UNESCO (2008) [institution]