This rare Liberian mask, smoothly carved from a heavy dark wood, has several characteristic features of Bassa Work: the so-called quarter-moon configuration; the vertical plaits extending down to the forehead; the straight nose with bored nostrils; the protruding lips, this time with two holes in the upper lip into which teeth were. originally set; simply delineated ears which harmonize with the hairdo; a straight and pointed chin. Usual for these masks are the rectangular eye openings. There are three rather large holes near the top edge of the piece, where the mask was attached obliquely to its basket hood structure, and many close-set holes around the edges of both sides of the facial area.https://digital.kenyon.edu/arthistorystudycoll...