Dogon Granary Door
Dogon Granary Door Dogon Granary Door
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$125.00

This Dogon Granary Door, was the access door to a family granary used to store millet, sorghum, seeds, and sometimes valuables. The door served as both a physical barrier and a spiritual safeguard to food and valuables that were critical to the family's survival.  

The iron elements you see—hinges, latch plates, and locking hardware—were typically forged by Dogon Blacksmiths a respected hereditary caste believed to possess transformative power because they worked with fire and metal.

Dogon doors are visual storytelling objects. The motifs carved into this door are not random:

• Stylized human figures 

These usually represent:

  • Ancestors watching over the household

  • Primordial beings from Dogon cosmology

  • Sometimes male–female pairs, symbolizing continuity, fertility, and lineage

Their placement near the top suggests protection and oversight.

• Geometric / grid patterns 

These are commonly interpreted as:

  • Fields or cultivated land

  • Stored grain

  • Order imposed on chaos, a core theme in Dogon belief

They visually echo agriculture and abundance—the very purpose of the granary.

• Symmetry

The near-mirror layout reinforces balance between:

  • Past and future

  • Male and female

  • Earth and cosmos

Symmetry is a quiet but powerful Dogon aesthetic principle.

Material & age

  • Wood: Likely local hardwood, hand-carved with adzes and chisels

  • Surface: The darkened patina comes from decades of:

    • Smoke from cooking fires

    • Handling

    • Natural oxidation and oils

  • Age: Most doors like this date from late 19th to early 20th century, though some were made slightly later using traditional methods

The wear is a feature, not a flaw—it’s evidence of real use.

Sizes:

Small ~9" x ~11"