ADAMma



An Igbo Maiden spirit Mask





Image Description:

A performer wears a mask of woman’s face, hair covered with braided wigs held together with a head-tie. Wearing a yellow body top and a miniskirt made from a collage of red, yellow and blue ankara materials. The masker, who is a man performs as Adamma, dancing in a virtuoso women’s style and at intervals engage flirtatiously with the audience.


Synopsis

Adamma is a contemporary Igbo maiden spirit masquerade. The name “Adamma” means “beautiful first daughter” in Igbo language. Igbo people are an ethnic group that live chiefly in the south-eastern part of Nigeria and speak the Igbo language. The masquerade is a public presentation of Igbo femininity by Igbo men. Through the performance of Adamma, femininity is publicly criticized and then idealized, and finally, playfully indulged in. Some men apparently perceive of gender identity as fluid and in need of stabilization, yet the Adamma masquerade does not offer this stability of gender experience that they seek.







CREATION: 2022, LAGOS. NIGERIA.
PREMIERE: 2022, Lapperanta museum, Finland.
EXHIBITION CONTENT: Mask, Documentary video, performance
DISTRIBUTION: Ideal for galleries, museums, art houses



Danced and incarnated by men, the lead character is represented as simultaneously female and male. In their futile search for a stable and morally controlled igbo femininity, these men are allowed to participate in femininity, which is a domain normally off limits to men Igbo culture. Except in the performance of other humorous parodies of women or the maiden-spirit masquerades that honor virtuous female ancestors.


By repeating this ritual, I investigated the significance of embodied, sensorial experience, and how my personal variation of this public play can function as a starting point for an artistic investigation into my own gender performance.