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True or false dogon sculptures were almost always made from silver.

User Nemani
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its false because it is made of rock and mud
User SergVro
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Answer:

The correct answer is False

Many historians consider that there isn’t a predominance regarding the material choose in African tribes. They would collect and mix different media and create assemblages.

Step-by-step explanation:

Dogon is an ethnic group resident in Mali’s plateaus and the borders of Burkina Fasso. They’re a reunion of different dialects that has as leaders – whether social, political or religious – the Hogons. They’re around 600,000 and mostly live in rocky hills and today a small percentage of them are half Muslim or Christian.

Their social organization is based on their myth of creation, which consider that objects can personify divinities. So, if a hogon is wearing a ceremonial costume, he personify one of their gods. The same would happen to their sculpture, part of their artistic production, which also includes the mask crafts and other artifacts.

They’re statuary is made of different materials, such as rock and metal. Dogons are excellent metal craftsmen and this ability is noticed in their art production. But sculptures have a different symbolic meaning for them. Thus they’re usually hidden from social appreciation, being closed in the privacy of their home.

As dogons are animists – which means they believe in incorporation and devotion of ancestral spirits – the sculptures are created whether to symbolize a dead relative or a creational spirit, serving as a physical medium in initiations.

They also can be found in the sites of workship, such as altars for nature forces, hunters or merchant protection. One of those artworks is characteristic is their hermaphrodite appearance with fluid body shapes.

User Khalid Azam
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