Ẹpa masquerade is one of the most visually powerful and symbolically complex performance traditions within Yorùbá culture, yet its headdresses remain under-examined as independent sites of meaning. This paper analyses the structural dynamics and symbolic meanings of selected Èkìtì-Ẹpa headdresses housed in reputable museums, situating them at the intersection of artistic form, ritual function, and cultural ideology. Drawing on art-historical, ethnographic, and indigenous knowledge perspectives, the paper demonstrates that Ẹpa headdresses function as architectonic and narrative structures rather than decorative accessories. It examines the relationship between the helmet base and superstructure, showing how scale, weight, balance, and construction influence movement, performance, and ritual efficacy. The paper also interprets key symbolic motifs such as exaggerated heads (orí), grotesque and maternal figures, scarification marks, pigments, and ritual encrustations within Yorùbá cosmology as expressions of destiny, ancestral authority, fertility, protection, and communal ethics. Through selected indigenous and museum-held examples, the paper establishes Ẹpa headdresses as active agents of spiritual mediation, social regulation, and historical memory, central to sustaining cultural continuity and indigenous artistic knowledge.
Stephen Ayodele Ayinmode (Sun,) studied this question.
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