African elephant bone sculpture

Discussion in 'Tribal Art' started by D'Manchago, Feb 14, 2026 at 10:54 PM.

  1. D'Manchago

    D'Manchago New Member

    Hi, I picked up this sculpture, the seller though it was whale bone and Polynesian, but it's obviously not bone of a marine mammal.
    Nor Polynesian in style.
    It looks like elephant bone or hippo bone and west African. Akan maybe?.
    As they keep bone or ivory house fetish idols with similar carving of a number of gods in their homes and the carving style looks similar. Any input ?
     

    Attached Files:

    Last edited: Feb 15, 2026 at 3:13 AM
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  2. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

  3. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    Welcome, D'Manchago. What is the size?
     
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  4. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Not too far off, a related culture, a bit further west.
    It is a Dayak carving, from Borneo. Judging from the grey gritty structure seen on the back of the head and legs it is antler, which is often used by the Dayak.
     
    Last edited: Feb 15, 2026 at 8:59 AM
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  5. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

  6. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

  7. D'Manchago

    D'Manchago New Member

    It is about 27cm long and about 7.5 cm wide at the widest in the head .
    It's got a slight curve in it that follows the twist of the bone, it is half the bone sk one side or it, the back s open, you can see in the pictures, Looks like the shin of an elephant or a hippo.
     
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  8. D'Manchago

    D'Manchago New Member

    No it's not antler. It's definitely a bone, the bone of a large mammal.
    But it's not anything made in Borneo, the figure has braided hair and is carved in the style of such things from the western part of Africa but from which group I'm not 100% sure as Akan, , gbe, Yoruba and do on have very similar idols
     
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  9. D'Manchago

    D'Manchago New Member

    https://www.galerie-artculture6.com...f_tiche_cameroun_cm_afrique_animisme_animiste

    Here is the same large bone and similar hashed patterns on the body , from the bamum / bamun people of western Cameroon . (Same ones that had a Eurocentric monarch in the 19th century and as such produced many curious cultural things)
    It is a much more intricate carvings , . But similar concept but these idols are all over West Africa in many cultures
    Here another listed as Akan
    https://puces-privees.com/vitrine/v...299/statuette-traditionnelle-akan-en-os,15253

    I feel more towards Akan, bamum carving is much more detailed, as is shown in the bamum idol in the link.
     
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  10. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Can you please post a clear, close-up photo of the bottom of the figure? That may clarify whether it is bone or antler. It looks like antler to me, which would make a Dayak attribution more likely.
     
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  11. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Antler can be distinguished from a typical long bone by the presence of the spongy interior structure throughout the length of the antler. There is no medullary cavity - the hollow channel containing marrow - in antler. While spongy bone does occur at the ends of long bones, I do not see any evidence of a medullary cavity in your carving.
    elk anter longitudinal section .jpg upload_2026-2-16_11-17-9.png
    elk antler human long bone


    The overall shape of your carving fits the shape of the antlers of the Sambar deer, native to Borneo.

    Sambar stag antlers - diagram.jpg
    https://www.sambardeer.com/training-course/reviews


    There is only one deer species that is native to Africa - the Barbary Stag - which occurs in the mountainous areas of Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. In addition to being a much less common material in sub-Saharan artifacts, the structure of the Barbary stag's antlers is a less likely fit to the shape of your carving.

    upload_2026-2-16_11-30-12.png
     
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  12. D'Manchago

    D'Manchago New Member

    Thanks, Yeah it's a large bone, not an atler. based on the grain of the bone and the narrow it looks like hippo bone or elephante, I'll have to compare other examples of the two animal species I have
     
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