Chief's or Diviner's Figure representing the Belgian Colonial Officer, Maximilien Balot (Primary Title)

Unknown (Artist)

circa 1931
Pende
Wood (possibly Alstonia Boonei), with metal repair staples
Place Made,Democratic Republic of Congo
Overall: 25 × 6 × 6 in. (63.5 × 15.24 × 15.24 cm)
2015.3
Not on view

This statue was made in response to the killing of Belgian colonial agent Maximilien Balot in the Pende area on June 8, 1931. Cruel treatment by the colonial administration and forced-labor practices of European industries operating there created a tense atmosphere. When Balot went to collect taxes and investigate complaints, those tensions erupted, and he was killed during a confrontation. The incident sparked a broader rebellion that lasted until September that year.

This statue may have been created as a way to immobilize the spirit of the dead man, which the Pende believe could wander and wreak havoc, and as a weapon to use in ritual warfare against the enemy. In either case, the figure is an artistic indictment of a despised colonial agent. The ramrod stance and cold, arrogant glare register a dark intensity.

Aldine S. Hartman Endowment Fund
Dutch National entry to the 60th Venice Biennale, installed at White Cube, Lusanga, DR Congo, March 18 - November 24, 2024

2022-2023 on loan to the permanent galleries of the North Carolina Museum of Art, August 2022 - August 2023

Fiktion Kongo, Museum Rietberg Zürich, Switzerland, November 22, 2019 - March 15, 2020
Collected in Gungu, Democratic Republic of the Congo, between 1972 and 1973; Purchased by Herbert F. Weiss (Washington, DC) in Flanders, Belgium, in 1973; Purchased by VMFA in March 2015.
© artist or artist’s estate

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