Life and career
Style
According to Alisa LaGamma in ''Heroic Africans: Legendary Leaders, Iconic Sculptures'':The artist's signature expressionistic style features exaggeration of the face and hands through elongation, which allowed him to reinterpret and ingeniously exploit the formal possibilities of different genres of prestige sculpture: standing figures as caryatid supports for seats...seated ''mboko'' (bowl bearers)...and stately male figures.
Discovery and collection
In the 1930s, Belgian art historian Frans Olbrechts noted that some ten figures, assembled for an exhibition, shared similar characteristics, and that two had been collected in the same town, Buli. As nothing was yet known of the sculptor in Western circles, Olbrechts gave him the title "Master of Buli". In the 1970s, Ngongo ya Chintu was identified by the owners of one of his figures as being an artist from the village of Kateba. Marilyn Stokstad notes that villagers in Kateba knew of the master's work, as he was well regarded there.References
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