Some artworks don’t just hang on a wall; they pull you forward, make you pause, and demand attention. The Kimbell Art Museum’s newest acquisitions do exactly that: a nineteenth-century Kota Reliquary Guardian Figure and a rare Kwele Mask with Curved Horns from Gabon. Both are now on view in the Louis I. Kahn Building, and both radiate a presence that feels almost alive.
The Kota figure — a mbulu ngulu — is pure sculptural authority. Carved from wood and wrapped in hammered metal sheets, it once stood atop baskets holding ancestral relics, guarding the past with quiet power. Its arch-shaped crest and gently curving extensions, ending in pierced volutes, frame a faceted brass face, a sharply pointed chin, and a subtle mouth. Three metal tones, copper, brass, and other alloys, catch and shift the light, creating a rhythm of shadow and shine that amplifies its presence. Every line, curve, and plane speaks of lineage, continuity, and spiritual protection. This is Kota art distilled to its most iconic, commanding form.
The Kwele mask delivers a different kind of force, mystical, serene, yet electric. Its concave, heart-shaped face, coated in white kaolin clay, radiates purity and protection. Long arched horns sweep downward in an inverted omega, while two smaller faces near the tips mirror the central visage, forming a triadic rhythm of balance and intrigue. Created for the Beete Association, a society dedicated to healing and initiation, the mask was meant to restore harmony between the living, ancestors, and forest spirits.
Both works traveled through distinguished European collections before arriving at the Kimbell Art Foundation in 2025. Together, they anchor the museum’s African holdings with pieces that are visually commanding, spiritually resonant, and impossible to ignore. They remind visitors that art isn’t decoration, it’s dialogue, history, and presence distilled into shape, light, and form.
“The Kota reliquary and Kwele mask are each exemplars of technical mastery and spiritual significance,” said Eric M. Lee, director of the Kimbell Art Museum. “The reliquary figure stands out even among the vast and diverse corpus of Kota art in public and private collections, while the extremely rare and beautiful Kwele mask is made all the more special by being exceptional within a small group of similar sculptures. I am so grateful to the Barbier-Mueller family for making these works available to us.”