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Who were the Asante and the Yoruba? What is the history of the Maasai? What are our Statues & Wall Hangings made of and what were the influences behind their creation?

Tribal Information
Asante:
Tribal Sculpture
The area in the central part of the Africa is a forested locale where the most renowned tribe is undoubtedly the Asante (also known as Ashanti). The Asante tribe speak the Twi language. Asante artistic production focuses primarily on decorative art objects. These fall into several categories - statues, furniture and jewelry. Statues and stools were occasionally placed in royal and commoner shrines - a room where magical materials such as brass vessels and amulets were kept. Asante carvers are famed for their female dolls, known as Akuaba. They display a stylized elongated body and an enlarged circular head. These dolls, consecrated by priests, are thought to have great and wondrous powers.
Maasai:
Maasai People

The Maasai are an indigenous African ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located in Kenya and northern Tanzania. Due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa, they are among the most well-known African ethnic groups internationally. They speak Kimaasai, also known as Maa.
Despite their reputation as fierce warriors, Maasai
culture revolves around their cattle. Maasai are not farmers but nomad pastoralists. The Maasai rely heavily on their cattle and goat herds for survival. These animals provide them with milk (and sometimes meat, though they rarely slaughter their herds as buying and selling cattle is the tribe's form of currency). One of their spiritual beliefs is that their rain god Enkai gave all cattle to the Maasai people, and therefore anyone else who possesses cattle must have stolen them from the Maasai. This has led to some fatal altercations with other tribes of the regions. The huts of the Maasai are built from dried cattle dung; cattle milk and blood are among the prime components of the Maasai diet.
Maasai women and girls are responsible for the building of the family hut or boma, taking care of the children, fetching firewood and water, washing clothes and preparing the family meals. The men do quite little in the way of physical labor. Maasai women are easily identified by their bright clothing and beads.

Yoruba:
Tribal Statues
The Yoruba, a people of around 2.5 million individuals, live mainly in the southwest of Nigeria and the south of Benin. The Yoruba conceive the cosmos as constructed 'In two realms, symbolized in the upper and lower halves of a spherical gourd: Orun, the supernatural, invisible world inhabited by spirits, ancestors and deities, and Aye, the visible, tangible world. Their Art often symbolizes these beliefs. The Yoruba economy is based on agriculture (maize, beans, yams, cassava, peanuts, coffee and bananas). Their craft specialties-making use of textiles, leather beads, gourds, metal and clay-have led to the development of intensive commerce and the creation of an extensive market economy.
Statues
Tribal Masks and Statues
Our metallic African Sculptures and Wall Hangings, which are usually figures and masks, often served a function in the traditional tribal society, to preserve and convey the beliefs and value of these societies that had no written documents. The figures usually depicted ancestors or spirits and some objects were believed to have great powers. These traditional works of art have been made in the same basic style for generations, even centuries. The style of each piece is determined by its unique identity and symbolic, spiritual significance in the life of the tribes which have been living in this magical land of Asante and Yoruba.