Female Erotic Intelligence and Arcane Power in the Art of the Yoruba Origin Ogboni Esoteric Order : An Intercultural Dialogue : Part 1 [ Edited ]

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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju

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Nov 11, 2018, 6:55:39 PM11/11/18
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                                                                               Female Erotic Intelligence and Arcane Power

                                                                                                             in the

                                                                    Art  of the Yoruba Origin Ogboni Esoteric Order

                                                                                         An Intercultural Dialogue


                                                                                            Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju

                                                                                                             Compcros

                                                                             Comparative Cognitive Processes and Systems

                                                            "Exploring Every Corner of the Cosmos in Search of Knowledge"

                                                                                                                 and                                                                                                                 

                                                                            
                                                                       VISUAL10-001.jpg


                                                                                           The Greater Ogboni Fraternity

                                                                                                 Earth, Humanity, Cosmos


                                                                                            Abstract

An exploration of the implications of the engagement with  female  sexuality, the clitoris particularly,   in the  artistic symbolism  of the Yoruba origin Ogboni esoteric order, in the context of Yoruba nature philosophy. The essay concludes with a  sequence of image collages crafted by myself using pictures from various sources,  accompanied by poetic text, creating a contemplative and ritualistic rhythm, an effort which is part of my initiative in demonstrating an individualistic adaptation of Ogboni, distilling contemplative and ritual practice from critical and integrative scholarship.

I have two versions of this essay, the present shorter one, and another that expounds further on contrasts between conceptions of the feminine in Ogboni, on one hand, and the complementary Yoruba institutions, Gelede and Ifa. The longer essay also examines beyond what is present in this composition  the significance of Ogboni nature philosophy in relation to Yoruba philosophy of nature in general. It also provides a brief but incisive picture of the philosophical and spiritual eroticism of Hindu Tantra, a central inspiration for this piece. I removed those sections from this work  in order to facilitate my control of the core of this paper  in an aspect of Ogboni iconography of the feminine and its hermeneutic potential.  I might present the expanded work later or adapt parts of it for other essays.

Contents

Salutation to the Ancestors, Both Ascended and Embodied
The Question  
      Invocation of the Pink Robed Monarch 
The Mystery that is Ogboni
What is the Clitoris?
Questions Arising from  the Prominence of the Clitoris in Ogboni Sculpture in Relation to Attitudes to the Clitoris in Classical Yoruba Culture
Evocations of Female Genitalia in General in Ogboni Sculpture
Clitoral Valorisation in Ogboni Sculpture in Contrast to the Culture of Clitoral Excision in Yorubaland 
Scholarship on Ogboni in Relation to Clitoral Prominence in Ogboni Sculpture
Information Sources
Figure 1
Who is Onile?
 Figure 2



Salutation to the Ancestors, Both Ascended and Embodied

I salute those ancestors who gave us Usugbo, described by some as the foundations of Ogboni
I salute those forebears who gave us Ogboni
I salute those who have, over the centuries, nurtured the sacred flame
I salute the intrepid ones who laid the foundations in humanity's search for knowledge
I salute those who passed on and expanded the fire, enabling it reach me
illuminations communicated through my mother, who taught me how to read, and my father, who built our family library.
May your inspirations blaze into infinity.
May we who catch the fire be worthy.
May the impact of the Divine One, through us, resonate across space and time. 


The Question  

      Invocation of the Pink Robed Monarch 

O pink robed monarch,
the king in the world, 
small yet powerful, 
minuscule yet potent, 
she of the rhythm of  emergence and withdrawal, 
we salute you.

May your favour be our pleasure
our relationship with you our mutual fulfillment
you that sleepeth not but may be aroused  by the one sensitive to your delicacies.

That invocation is derived from a name for the clitoris in Yoruba thought, "oba inu aye""the king in the world", as described by Loland Matory in Sex and the Empire that is No More: Gender and the Politics  of Metaphor in  Oyo Yoruba Religion.

The Mystery that is Ogboni

On account of the prominence of depictions of the clitoris in the art of the Yoruba origin Ogboni esoteric order, can ideas about this organ be a point of entry  into the knowledge currently available to the world on  this deeply secretive group? 

The loose ideological confederation of  esoteric groups named  Ogboni, intimately related to the also secretive  Osugbo, are  known to many Nigerians as a mystery both powerful and suggestive of something to be wary of. These are organizations  of whom much is said but little  understood in the Nigerian social space on account of the balance of secrecy and influence they have demonstrated over the centuries till the present. Having once been one of the most powerful political and judicial systems in Yoruba history, they still retain a  subtle influence and an image in the public mind  associated with mysterious and dangerous occult power. This sense of mystery is reinforced by the fact that the rich scholarship on Ogboni, illuminating, though addressing at best, a very restricted access to its secrets, is unknown  to many.

What is the Clitoris?

The clitoris is the female sexual organ devoted solely to pleasure, its extreme sensitivity deriving from its more than 8,000 sensory nerve endings often making it central to the temporarily  transfigurative physical and mental experience of orgasm, as experienced by women. The Wikipedia essay on the subject, referencing various scholarly and more general texts,  describes it as " the human female's most sensitive erogenous zone and generally the primary anatomical source of human female sexual pleasure". 

I Tavare's et al's "The Predictive Role of Different Types of Sexual Stimulation on Female Orgasm Occurrence" describes what seems the dominant medical view on the clitoris: 

  "Women’s orgasms can be induced by erotic stimulation of various genital and non-genital sites. Despite the diversity of erogenous zones, the clitoris is the most sensitive erogenous zone and the main anatomical structure accountable for obtaining sexual pleasure in women, which is justified by the presence of over eight thousand sensory nerve endings only at the surface of its external portion, the glans clitoris... Findings showed that women’s orgasm is more frequently experienced through sexual activities that involve clitoral stimulation compared to coital activity alone. ... these findings reinforce the idea that it is a difficult task to distinguish orgasms as clearly initiated in the vagina or in the clitoris. Thus, the results are in agreement with the idea that any type of sexual activity will implicate the stimulation of not only a single anatomical structure, but also of some other adjacent anatomical structures...and, as such, it seems to be hard to imagine any sexual activity that does not involve clitoral stimulation" .      

James G. Pfaus et al's  "The Whole Versus the Sum of Some of the Parts: Toward Resolving the Apparent Controversy of Clitoral Versus Vaginal Orgasms" ( Socioaffective Neuroscience and Psychology, Oct. 25, 2015),    is  particularly evocative of the fascination and excitation of enquiry inspired by this subject, demonstrating  the scope of the debates within the medical community on the structure and significance of the clitoris.:


Of all the orgasms on Earth, none are more mysterious than those in females. Controversy has raged over them for more than a century. If they do not serve an obvious reproductive or fitness-related endpoint ... then why do they exist? What do women get out of them? Can all women have them? And the most mysterious of all: What produces them? This latter question continues to ignite vehement debate over the role of the clitoris and vagina".

"
The nature of a woman’s orgasm has been a source of scientific, political, and cultural debate for over a century. Since the Victorian era [ the reign of Queen Victoria in England], the pendulum has swung from the vagina to the clitoris, and to some extent back again, with the current debate stuck over whether internal sensory structures exist in the vagina that could account for orgasms based largely on their stimulation, or whether stimulation of the external glans clitoris is always necessary for orgasm.

We review the history of the clitoral versus vaginal orgasm debate as it has evolved with conflicting ideas and data from psychiatry and psychoanalysis, epidemiology, evolutionary theory, feminist political theory, physiology, and finally neuroscience" [ and conclude with presenting ] "A new synthesis... that acknowledges the enormous potential women have to experience orgasms from one or more sources of sensory input, including the external clitoral glans, internal region around the “G-spot” that corresponds to the internal clitoral bulbs, the cervix, as well as sensory stimulation of non-genital areas such as the nipples".

"With experience, stimulation of one or all of these triggering zones are integrated into a “whole” set of sensory inputs, movements, body positions, autonomic arousal, and partner- and contextual-related cues, that reliably induces pleasure and orgasm during masturbation and copulation. The process of integration is iterative and can change across the lifespan with new experiences of orgasm".

Whatever the position of medical researchers on the spectrum of views on the scope of relationship between the clitoris and female orgasm, the general perspective, as far as I can see, accords with Mazloomdoost D  and Pauls RN's summation in   summation in "A Comprehensive Review of the Clitoris and Its Role in Female Sexual Function" ( Sex Med Rev. Oct. 2015, 3 (4) : 245-263), examining " available evidence (from 1950 until 2015) relating to clitoral anatomy, the clitoral role in sexual functioning, vaginal eroticism, female prostate, female genital mutilation/cutting, and surgical implications for the clitoris", that "The intricate neurovasculature and multiplanar design of the clitoris contribute to its role in female sexual pleasure. Debate still remains over the exclusive role of the clitoris in orgasmic functioning..The clitoris is possibly the most critical organ for female sexual health. Its importance is highlighted by the fact that the practice of female genital cutting is often used to attenuate the female sexual response. While its significance may have been overshadowed in reports supporting vaginal eroticism, it remains pivotal to orgasmic functioning of most women..".


 On account of its potency, a power that deeply shapes body, mind and and spirit, the latter being aspects of the self that transcend the purely material and psychological, and inspired by the name of the Centre for Erotic Intelligence, which describes erotic intelligence as central to "our personality, our creativity, imagination, and personal expression [ critical to] the way we  perceive, connect, and engage with the world around us", a group that I was led to through its rich article on the clitoris, I describe the clitoris, not simply in terms of female sexual pleasure but in relation to feminine erotic intelligence, the construction of the self through its erotic capacities.


Along similar lines, " Alessandra Graziottini  and  Dania Gambini describe "women’s sexuality [ as] deeply rooted in the anatomy and physiology of their whole bodies... a sexuality whose biologic anatomic and functional basis is then modulated and reshaped throughout life by personal, relational, and contextdependent events and affective dynamics"  in "Anatomy and Physiology of Genital Organs – Womenfrom Handbook of Clinical Neurology, Vol. 130. Edited  D.B. Vodusˇek and F. Boller,   Elsevier, 2015,


Questions Arising from  the Prominence of the Clitoris in Ogboni Sculpture in Relation to Attitudes to the Clitoris in Classical Yoruba Culture

It is this potential for a configuration of the self through the intersection of diverse but correlative potencies in which the erotic is central, that is the signal identity of the deployment of the clitoris in Ogboni sculpture.

 In Yorubaland, where Ogboni originates, along with other parts of Nigeria, Africa and Asia, some people cut off the clitoris entirely or remove  a part of it to inhibit female sexual pleasure, thereby encouraging sexual discipline, it is believed, or to protect the unborn child believed to be at danger from this very small but potent organ.
                                                                   
Why then does Ogboni art, as evident from online searches and books,  at times depicts women  as  both naked and with their clitoris discreetly depicted but very  prominent, as shown in the pictures in this essay?

Why should such a reputedly conservative group as the Ogboni, traditionally described as a society of elders, thus celebrate the clitorisand among a people who have a long tradition of cutting off a part or all of that biological feature, both to tame female sexuality and to protect babies in the belief that if the clitoris  touches the baby's head during childbirth, the child would die and  that cutting this organ enables safe delivery? 

What  relationships does this  seeming contradiction have  with Rowland Abiodun's observation,  in "Woman in Yoruba Religious Images", of the understanding of the power demonstrated by the clitoris in terms of the hidden but potent force represented by the ancestors and  by the occult potency of women at the nexus of birth and death, creativity and destruction,   represented by the concept of "Iya Wa Osoronga", which may be translated as "Our Mothers Sorcerous", or with  Loland Matory's account  of the clitoris as king in aye, the Yoruba understanding of the world as material and social conglomeration?

What is the scope and implications of the similarity between  the Yoruba conceptions of the clitoris described by Abiodun and that of the esoteric group the Mevoungou of Cameroon, as depicted by Naminata Diabate  in Genital Power: Female Sexuality in West African Literature and Film ( 2011  PhD Diss. University of Texas at Austin), referencing, among others, the field work of  Jeanne-Françoise Vincent’s Traditions et Transition: Entretiens Avec des Femmes Beti du sud-Cameroun (1976, 2001) describing Mevoungou cosmology as one in which the clitoris is perceived as a particularly potent embodiment of evu ( a concept elaborated on by Peter Geschiere's   "Chiefs and the Problem of Witchcraft: Varying Patterns in South and West Cameroon" , Journal of Legal Pluralism1996, Nrs. 37-38, Note 3.) and Laura Hengehold's ,  "Witchcraft, Subjectivation, and Sovereignty: Foucault in Cameroon", Sens Public, 2009) a force similar to the Yoruba ase (  Henry John Drewal et al, Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought,1989, 16) a pervasive  power  open to use for good and evil and underlying the transformative creativity critical for unusual achievement?

 Could this constellation of ideas illuminate the interpretive possibilities of the explicit depiction of the clitoris in Ogboni art? 

There is no answer to these questions in the scholarship available to me so far, this scholarship being the core of writings on Ogboni accessible though academic databases. The primary constellation of academic texts on Ogboni emerging from years of fieldwork by various scholars of the subject does not develop any Ogboni ideas on sexuality outside its procreative context;  conception and child birth, to the best of my knowledge,  being the cardinal values of female sexuality in classical Yoruba thought, the cultural complex to which Ogboni belongs.   
                                          
I am trying to respondthrough speculation based on a study of Ogboni visual art in the context of classical Yoruba conceptions of the female body and self and the human body in general, to the questionprovoked  by the nexus of conflicting values in Yoruba culture converging on this female biological feature. 

It is a subject of profound significance at the intersection of biology, psychology and spirituality, with the distinctive Ogboni deployment of this biological form evoking these conjunctions, which in themselves resonate with their intersections in other discursive contexts.

Various branches of biology and its relationship with the mind, along with experiential accounts of sexual encounter,  demonstrate the profound effects of  clitoral stimulation on the body/mind convergence and the relationship between sex, in which such stimulation is often critical for women, and transformative experiences at the intersection of body, mind and spirit.

 The 10th century Hindu Kashmiri thinker Abhinvavagupta, in the context of his erotic  mysticism ( Kerry Martin Skora, "Abhinavgupta's Erotic Mysticism: The Reconciliation of Spirit and Flesh"), as depicted in John Dupuche's Abhinavagupta: The Kula Ritual as Elaborated in Chapter 29 of the Tantralolka ( Delhi: Motital Banarsidass, 2003, 256) describes the clitoris as the fire that lights the flame of consciousness, impelling the combustion of the senses within that conflagration, a flame of such intensity it reaches to the core of the self, its ground in the source of existence. 

 Evocations of Female Sexuality in General in Ogboni Sculpture

Evocations of feminine sexuality as known to me in Ogboni sculpture are centred in two forms. One consists in the depiction of female genitalia without emphasizing any part of the vulva, the outer section, simply inscribing  a few lines  clearly delineating the presence of the erotic and procreative zone, or in fewer cases, making a slit that serves this purpose.The other involves both providing a structure indicating the presence of the vulva and a definite addition representing the clitoris, at the top of the vulva.

The sculpture that depicts the vulva alone is that of edan, the paired male and female forms that constitute a central symbolic and spiritual vessel of Ogboni. That which emphasizes the clitoris represents Onile, owner of land, earth and house as representative of the  Ogboni iledi, the association's sacred meeting house and the communal and terrestrial associations of that  location as unifying Earth and humanity.

Clitoral Valorisation in Ogboni Sculpture in Contrast to the Culture of Clitoral Excision in Yorubaland

Accounts of generational continuity of female clitoral mutilation among Yoruba people is  described, amongst numerous sources, by Nurudeen Alliyu's "Perspectives on the Decline of Female Genital Mutilation in Abeokuta Nigeria" ( 2015, Ife Social Sciences Review, vol. 24 no. 2), in the context of three forms of FGM, Female Genital Mutilation, as possibly involving "the removal of the hood or of the clitoris and or part of the clitoris itself    [or the] removal of the clitoris along with partial or total excision of the labia minora [ or] the removal of the clitoris, the labia minora and the adjacent medial part of the labia majora, and the stitching of the vaginal opening leaving an opening the size of a pinhead to allow for the flow of urine and menstrual blood".


TC Okeke et al in "An Overview of Female Genital Mutilation in Nigeria"( Annals of Medical and Health Sciences Research 2012 2(1) ) states that  "the removal of the prepuce or the hood of the clitoris and all or part of the clitoris" is the most common method of this practice in Southern Nigeria where Yorubaland belongs. Adeyemo Adeyinka et al's "Knowledge and Practice of Female Circumcision among Women of Reproductive Ages in South West Nigeria"(Journal of Humanities and Social Science , 2012, vol.2, no.3) and Jennifer Quichocho's Through the Yoruba Lens: A Postcolonial  Discourse of Female Circumcision    (2018 MA thesis, University of Denver), are further representative of the temporal progression of this phenomenon. Scholarly accounts are  reinforced by such newspaper reports as "Female Genital Cutting in Ekiti State-A Tale of Three Kings"( Sola Abe, Guardian Nigeria, 09/09/2017).The descriptions of continuity of the practice are  modified by such a report as Nurudeen Alliyu's rich first hand accounts in "Perspectives on the Decline of Female Genital Mutilation in Abeokuta Nigeria" ( 2015).

Kim Marie Vaz'  The Woman with the Artistic Brush: Life History of Yoruba Batik Nike Olaniyi Davies ( 1995)   sums up the scope of the reasons for this practice in Yorubaland as well as ways of interpreting the expressed rationale of its practitioners. These presentations, consisting of first hand experiences and analyses,  paint  a tragic image of fear of the clitoris as sexual enhancer and practically supernatural force, accounts that describe Yorubaland as demonstrating the highest concentration of the practice of mutilating female genitalia in the name of the supposed good of the victim.  This perceived good is that of inhibiting female sexual pleasure, thereby encouraging sexual discipline , protecting the unborn child whom it is believed would die if their head touches the clitoris as well as easing childbirth through cutting the clitoris.

The practice demonstrates a range of horrific physical and psychological health consequences, summed up, among other sources, in TC Okeke et al( 2012) and the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Health and World Health Organisation's "Elimination of Female Genital Circumcision in Nigeria"  (2007).

In the light of these developments, why would the sculpture of one of the most venerable protectors of Yoruba social order, a society of elders who are more likely to be conservative than liberal, make a point of crafting a prominent clitoris on a work of art representing the spiritual expression of the venerational centre of their group?

Scholarship on Ogboni in Relation to Clitoral Prominence in Ogboni Sculpture

In the literature on Ogboni I have encountered so far,  Henry John Drewal's "The Meaning of Osugbo Art: A Reappraisal" mentions clitoral prominence in Onile sculpture  but does not  present any explanation for this artistic feature, either in terms of first hand information from Ogboni members or as a speculative deduction by himself.  Teresa Washington's  The Architects of Existence: Aje in Yoruba Cosmology, Ontology, and Orature describes this sculptural feature as suggesting female power , without elaborating on the idea . As significant as her interpretation is,  she is  clearly making an imaginative projection ungrounded in first hand accounts from field workers on the subject, drawing as she is on  Babatunde Lawal's "À Yà Gbó, À Yà Tó : New Perspectives on Edan Ògbóni", the most comprehensive essay I know on Ogboni, relentless in its determined explication of every facet of the Ogboni sculpture it discusses, particularly the feminine forms, yet is silent on the clitoral prominence in the striking Onile image it presents.

Peter Morton Wiliams' 1960 "The Yoruba Ogboni Cult in Oyo",    the first amongst this sequence of texts to present the  image of the Onile in question, shown in this essay in figure 3,  through his engaging account of Ajagbo, a version of Onile that is remarkable for the conjunction between its visuality, its symbolization and its judicial role as a spiritual fighter for the most uncompromising kind of justice and, yet, in her nakedness, displays a prominent clitoris, the same Onile form which Drewal, Abiodun and Washington are responding to, does not mention the clitoral presence at all. Evelyn Roache-Selk's From the Womb of Earth: An Appreciation of Yoruba Bronze Art, is majestic on its subject and particularly glorious on Onile, but like Washington, makes only a brief but memorable interpretation of  clitorial visibility in this sculptural  genre.

A scholar on Ogboni who could be particularly  sensitive to the subject is Hans Witte, as demonstrated by his acute keenness to and bold interpretations of the conceptual dimensions of  feminine spirituality in Yoruba thought in "The Invisible Mothers: Female Power in Yoruba Iconography" ( Approaches to Iconology, Volumes 4-6) , but  I am yet to read his book Earth and Ancestors : Ogboni Iconography and his PhD thesis in Dutch on Ogboni art, the title of which may be translated as  Yoruba Symbolism of the Earth.

Does the explicit depiction of the clitoris in Ogbon Onile sculpture suggest a keen sensitivity to female sexuality, not only in terms of procreative capacity, as may be adduced for those Onile sculpture where female genitalia are shown, but also, or exclusively in relation to female sexual pleasure, as represented by those works in which the clitoris is distinctively displayed? Why the marked visibility of the clitoris in  sculpture of such striking seriousness of presence and gravity of association and function?

I am also fascinated by the visual conjunction of the prominent but discretely delineated clitoris with the horns on the heads of  these forms of Onile sculpture. It is logical to associate the power of female sexuality enabled by the clitoris  with the wild force evoked by the horns of the Onile art  in which both clitoral presence and horns occur. Thus, a power at the intersection of or enabled by the conjunction of female sexual power  and a potency suggestive of the force  of untamed nature may be seen as evoked by these visual configurations.  

Information Sources

My knowledge of this field comes purely from reading the work of scholars who have been allowed some access to the esoterica of this group or confederation of groups, as well as pictures of this art. I am yet to read two of the three books I know of on Ogboni art, Hans Witte's Earth and Ancestors:Ogboni Iconography, Witte's Yoruba Symbolism of the Earth Theo Dobbelmann's Der Ogboni-Geheimbund. Bronzen aus Sudwest-Nigeria, which Google Translate renders as The Ogboni Secret Society: Bronzes from South-West Nigeria, and, perhaps Witte's Fishes of the Earth: Mudfish Symbolism in Yoruba Iconography.

I am also taking note, for future study,  of books on Ogboni generally, such as A. P. Anyebe's Ogboni: The Birth and Growth of the Reformed Ogboni Fraternity,  Akinbowale  Akintola's  The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity (ROF) : Its Origin and Interpretation of its Doctrines and Symbolism. Classify  and JSTOR  are proving particularly helpful for access to lists of texts on Ogboni , and, as with JSTOR, also  access to those texts.

I justify my writing about Ogboni in spite of the limitations of my access to the published literature, itself at best a small fraction  of what may be known about this esoteric confederation, with the understanding of myself as an explorer who is describing a marvelous country of ideas and artistic expression he has discovered, organizing and sharing his understanding and making deductions from it as he proceeds. Within this context, the literature published in scholarly journals and scholarly books  demonstrates a unified picture of the various genres of Ogboni art and some of their symbolic value, perspectives reinforced by the images of this art from various art selling houses and museums, enabling one readily draw valid conclusions and make generalizations, though circumscribed  by the knowledge to which one has access.


                                                                                       

                                                           26.AM_.0429-1300dpi.jpg

                                                                                           Figure 1

A wonderful Onile image, sublime in its quiet majesty, its remarkable beauty of construction and its sense of quiet power. The clitoral hood is prominently though discretely carved, aligning, in the body's verticular structure, with the beautifully incised face, the elegant but  carefully composed eyes and the seamless combination of grace and wild potency evoked by the horns in their deft construction and associative power,   beautifully constructed  in their baptizing of the unhuman into the human.

Image source: Barakat: Mirror of All Ages and Cultures. Accessed 11/9/2018.

Who is Onile?

Onílè is an Ogboni conception indicating the  owner of the land, and by extension the earth, which humanity relates with as primary enabler of embodied existence, generator and container of arcane  powers,  foundational companion on life's walk conducted on her surface,  the earth which humanity  transforms into living space.


Onílé  is also this identity as   the  owner of the house representing this transformation, the house as sacred communal space of Ogboni, symbolic of the house that is the community, the community that is the microcosm of the world,   the house of the world, ile aye, that is humanity's place in the habitat that is the cosmos,  and, as one may expand this associative continuum, the cosmos itself a structure of constants and dynamism enabling it as the home represented by the possibilities it constitutes,   a specific  actualization of the unknown scope of the potentialities of existence, a summation  integrating and building on various identifications of this figure,  particularly Henry John Drewal's "The Meaning of Osugbo Art: A Reappraisal", Babatunde Lawal's "À Yà Gbó, À Yà Tó : New Perspectives on Edan Ògbóni", Rowland  Abiodun et al's Yoruba Art and Aesthetics and  Henry John Drewal et al's  Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought.


Onile figures may be male or female,  as Drewal demonstrates in "The Meaning of Osugbo Art" through an Onile image with a prominent erect penis, as shown by the male and female single and group Onile  figures at the site of the New Orleans Museum of Art, and as reinforced by Babatunde Lawal's argument in "À Yà Gbó, À Yà Tó" that Earth is understood as both male and female in Yoruba culture, and as demonstrated by the male and female pair of edan, the central sculptural form of Ogboni, being addressed as Ile, Earth, and as Iya, mother, as Lawal observes, in that identity's androgynous formulation, and, as one may speculate,  in a supra-androgynous characterization, subsuming and transcending gender.


Female Onile figures  demonstrating horns and a visible clitoris are depicted, according to my knowledge of this art so far,  in terms of a number of  modulations represented by the  figures pictured in this essay. One extreme of this expressive form, represented by figure 1, is actualised in terms of  soft but serious facial features and delicate modelling of the contours of the body. Another  extreme, visible in figure 3, projects an impression of gravitas, generated by the tersely formulated body and stylized face, amplified by the flat breasts of an elderly woman as opposed to the erect pointedness of the full mammaries of the younger woman in the other Onile image. The contrast between both figures is  reinforced by Peter Morton Williams' description in "The Yoruba Ogboni Cult of Oyo",  of the Onile  sculpture in the image of an elderly woman as Ajagbo,  a combative and  "justly harsh orisa"  or deity,  invoked  in cases of judgment among the Ogboni, in which the figurine's body is rubbed with various substances, the liquid from which all parties in a grave  dispute must drink in a ritual context, in the understanding that the guilty party will die some time after as a result of the power of this ritual test.


                                                                                           
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                                                                                             Figure 2

A magnificent Onile image with what looks like a sadly vandalised pubic section. The regal bearing of the figure remains unmistakable. The arcane beard is visible along with the rich breasts in their slender elegance. A beautiful cap sits atop a symbol  conventional to the foreheads of Ogboni figures, back facing crescents, which, according to Lawal in "À Yà Gbó, À Yà Tó evoke rejuvenative power, their being inscribed on the forehead perhaps suggesting the integration of such capacities within the various mutually nested levels of ori, the head understood in Yoruba cosmology as both biological centre of the embodied self and analogue for the metaphysical essence of the self existing beyond space and time but active in the life configuration of the embodied individual, as  "essence, attribute, and quintessence...the uniqueness of persons, animals, and things, their inner eye and ear, their sharpest point and their most alert guide as they navigate through this world and the world beyond",  as summed up in Olabiyi Babalola Yai's description in his review of Pemberton et al's  Yoruba : Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought in African Arts, Vol. 25, No. 1, 1992. The spoon, as an instrument for  eating food,  is described by Lawal as representing the nurturing role of women.

Image source: Barakat. Accessed 11/9/2018.


Correlative with the varied impressions projected by the kneeling, horned  Onile image, of which the only examples exemplifying all those attributes are female,  is that of the fully bearded woman, as richly discussed, along with other Ogboni iconography, in Lawal's "À Yà Gbó, À Yà Tó ". The scope of the beard, in its contrast with the prominent breasts of the figure and the often prominent female genitalia, projects something inexplicably strange  and powerful, a bearded woman in classical Yoruba thought being associated with mysterious spiritual  powers related to the largely feminine, ambivalently moral spiritual personalities known as  aje who inspire a wary respect,  though in the literature on Ogboni,  aje is described  as being a demonstration of the forces emanating from the varied potencies represented by the Earth rather than a suggestion of something negative.

The arcane, therefore, is projected in Ogboni art of the feminine in terms of horns and full beards. Making this art even more powerful in terms of the conjunction of biologically impossible contraries, is the fully bearded woman shown holding richly rounded breasts or suckling a child at her breast, or, foregrounding the erotic as it enables the maternal,  the  prominent carving out of female genitalia on female figures whose faces are defined by beards or their heads by horns,  or, moving to the purely erotic, with the clitoris markedly displayed, discreet but unmistakable between the legs of some examples of the horned Onile, as in the two versions shown in this essay. Ogboni art may thus be seen as projecting the idea of the integration of wild power and  the female self through its sculpted image of the horned woman.

The maternal, depicted in terms of full and older breasts,  the arcane, through horns and full beards, the erotic, in the form of full breasts, a delicately shaped figure and depictions of female genitalia.The range of female Ogboni figures thus spans a comprehensive  range of representations of the feminine in its erotic, maternal and arcane possibilities.


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