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Figure of a female devotee of the Yoruba thunder deity Shango, holding the god’s characteristic symb
Oya by André Hora
Yoruba aso oke shawlNigeria, 19th century
lemanja
Tamari As Moremi Ajasoro
Oshun, Igba Orisha from Cuba
Offerings to Oya Yansa, Brazil
Ibejis twins, Museu Afro Brasil, São Paulo, Brazil
Oya Yansã, orisha of storms, wind, and river Niger, photo by Tiago Sant´anna.
Temple of Pythons, Benin
The egúngún masquerade tradition, practiced by the Yorùbá people of West Africa and their diasporic
Omulu/Obaluaie
OGUN by Ahab Aguiar
ferrific:cactusrabbit:literaryvice432:kushitekalkulus:COLLECTION OF YORUBA ORISHASNot to diss on Eur
The works in Disguise: Masks and Global African Art are organized around the idea that masquerade is
wayworld: “Yoruba woman with hair wrapped in black thread, Ife, Nigeria" Eliot Elisofon, 1970.
Fragment of a terracotta head, from the ancient Yoruba city of Ife, in present-day Osun State, Niger
artmindbodysoul:Olokun Yoruba // ★The Sea Goddess of Nigeria★
Carved ivory bracelet of the Yoruba people, of the Owo region of present-day Nigeria, depicting hunc
magictransistor:Egungun mask and costume (Wood, pigment, fabric); Egba Yoruba; Abeokuta, Nigeria (20
i be ji. yoruba bronze. pre 1700 a.d.
asodara:Sanaa. Season 2.Photography: @andrewmgleasonMakeup: @kamitafoya/@manyfacegoddessHair: @kayla
eorwyn: YORUBA GODDESSES AND GODS //// Yemaya / Yemanjá Yemaya, also known as Yemanjá is the Yorùbá
Egúngún masquerades strengthen connections between the living and their ancestors in West African Yo
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