Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
In the 15th century, Dogon people fleeing hostilities in their homeland—caused by slave raiders’ incursions and the expansion of Islam—migrated to the rocky Bandiagara Escarpment in present-day Mali, where they encountered the Tellem people. While the Dogon eventually expelled the Tellem from the region, the two peoples appear to have influenced each other’s sculptural styles. This horse-and-rider features the pared-down style and encrusted surface associated with sculptures made by the Tellem.
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China — Standing Attendant (Tomb Figurine)
Tellem — Female Figure
Luluwa — Mother-and-Child Figure (Bwanga bwa Chibola)
China — Standing Attendant
China — Standing Attendant
Ancient Egyptian — Statuette of the God Horus
Sha — Mask
China — Grave Guardian Beast (Zhenmu Shou)
Hemba — Ritual Head
China — Lamp Stand
Yoruba — Mask for Egungun (Ere Egungun)
China — Lamp of Human Form