ETHMU 044636

Collier-sifflet

Back to results
044636
Whistle necklace of a witchdoctor (nganga)
Central African Republic
Gbaya or Banda. Second half of the 19th century?
Wood, leopard and hippopotamus teeth, antelope horn, glass, glass paste
Gift from the painter Émile Chambon in 1981; former collection brought back by François Coppier? about 1905
MEG Inv. ETHMU 044636
Geolocate the object

The image above is subject to copyright.
Copyrights for Photographic Reproduction

Instrument collections

In a study based on the MEG collection, published in 1919, the anthropologist and doctor Georges Montandon attempted to trace the origins and descent of musical instruments throughout the world. He grouped the instruments in ensembles, presented as plates of photographs and drawings. The study ends with a geographical sketch map showing the distribution of different types of instruments across the world.

As the study was read in scientific circles, the MEG’s instrument collection, classified in this manner, was widely quoted and used by researchers working on rational classification. The diffusionist approach was later abandoned to the benefit of comparative organology and contextual inventories.

Aerophones

The instruments in this class use the vibration of the air to produce sound. The colour of the sound (timbre) and degrees of intensity may differ widely from one type to another. The sound produced by wind instruments (aerophones) comes from a stream of air set vibrating by the lips (horns), air blown against a ridge (flutes and whistles) or reeds (clarinets, oboes, mouth organs). This class also includes free aerophones, which slice the air as they whirl round (bullroarers or rhombus).

Some cultures put taboos on the use of these instruments, either because they are held to the mouth from which the breath of life emanates, or because the vibrating “material”, the air, is invisible.

Bibliograpy

  • Huet Michel. 1978. Danses d'Afrique. Paris : .., Voir fig. 208
  • Grootaers, Jan-Lodewijk. 2007. Ubangi : art et cultures au cœur de l'Afrique. Arles: Actes Sud.
  • Savary, Claude. 1992. Objets de pouvoirs - Ancienne magie Bantou en Afrique Centrale. Turin: Ivrea et MEG.

© 2021 Musée d'ethnographie, Genève