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  • GBV  (3)
  • Kunst  (3)
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781935294030 , 9788874395781
    Language: English
    Pages: 111 S. , zahlr. Ill.
    DDC: 709.68/07477132
    RVK:
    Keywords: Art, African Exhibitions ; Art Exhibitions ; Decorative arts Exhibitions ; Art Exhibitions ; Ausstellungskatalog ; Ausstellungskatalog ; Afrika Südost ; Kunst ; Sachkultur
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis S. 108 - 110
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9780300246872 , 0300246870
    Language: English
    Pages: 128 Seiten , Illustrationen, 1 Karte
    DDC: 700.96
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ausstellungskatalog ; Ausstellungskatalog ; Subsaharisches Afrika ; Kunst ; Museum
    Abstract: An important investigation of the complicated relationship between canonical African art and the practices of contemporary African artists. Recognizing the second lives of historical African artworks when they enter museum collections and addressing them in dialogue with the works of six established and emerging African artists, this book represents how today's practitioners are reformulating the continent's artistic traditions to respond to the contemporary landscape. Historically, African art objects such as masks and sculptures were composed of a matrix of materials that included medicine bundles, raffia assemblage, hides, and metal, some or all of which were repurposed: a "second career" for the materials. This practice of transforming materials has wider cultural resonance in Africa today, where electronics, discarded engines, and rubber tires are incorporated by artisans into domestic and personal items. The contemporary African artists featured here-El Anatsui (Ghana), Nnenna Okore (Nigeria), Zohra Opoku (Ghana), Elias Sime (Ethiopia), Tahir Carl Karmali (Kenya), and Goncalo Mabunda (Mozambique)-reflect these dual traditions, reviving conceptual elements of historical African art by creating work that responds to the evolution of Africa's artistic traditions.00Exhibition: Cleveland Museum of Art, USA (20.10.2019-08.03.2020)
    Note: Rückseite Titelblatt: Published on the occasion of the exhibition "Second Careers: Two Tributaries in African Art", July 11 to November 29, 2020, at the Cleveland Museum of Art
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  • 3
    ISBN: 0500516561 , 1935294075 , 9780500516560 , 9781935294078
    Language: English
    Pages: XV, 296 S. , zahlr. Ill., Kt. , 30 cm
    Edition: 1. publ.
    DDC: 985/.01
    Keywords: Huari art Exhibitions ; Huari Indians Exhibitions Antiquities ; Huari art Exhibitions ; Huari Indians Exhibitions ; Antiquities ; Huari Site (Peru) Exhibitions Antiquities ; Huari Site (Peru) Exhibitions ; Antiquities ; Ausstellungskatalog Cleveland Museum of Art 28.10.2012-06.01.2013 ; Huari-Kultur ; Kunst
    Abstract: "Eminent ancestors of the better-known Inca, the Wari ascended to power in the south-central highlands of Peru in about AD 600, underwent a period of explosive growth, and then, by AD 1000, collapsed. During this lifespan, they created a society of such unprecedented complexity that many today regard it as the first empire in the Andes. Elite arts and the ideologies that informed them were among the culture's most prominent exports. From their eponymous capital, one of the largest archaeological sites in South America, the Wari sent elaborate objects and textiles to their highland provincial centers as well as down into populous Pacific coastal areas to the west. The arts were crucial to their political, economic, and religious systems. Since the Wari did not write, the arts took on special roles in preserving and communicating information. This book is published on the occasion of an exhibition organized by the Cleveland Museum of Art that features some 170 objects from collections in Canada, Europe, Peru, and the United States. The selection covers the full range of Wari elite arts: elaborate textiles, which probably were at the core of Wari value systems; sophisticated ceramics of various styles; exquisite personal ornaments made of precious materials; carved wood containers; and works in stone and other media. The exhibition, the first in North America devoted to the arts of the Wari, was curated and the cataloged edited by Susan E. Bergh, curator of Pre-Columbian and Native North American art at the Cleveland Museum of Art."--P. [2] of cover
    Abstract: "Eminent ancestors of the better-known Inca, the Wari ascended to power in the south-central highlands of Peru in about AD 600, underwent a period of explosive growth, and then, by AD 1000, collapsed. During this lifespan, they created a society of such unprecedented complexity that many today regard it as the first empire in the Andes. Elite arts and the ideologies that informed them were among the culture's most prominent exports. From their eponymous capital, one of the largest archaeological sites in South America, the Wari sent elaborate objects and textiles to their highland provincial centers as well as down into populous Pacific coastal areas to the west. The arts were crucial to their political, economic, and religious systems. Since the Wari did not write, the arts took on special roles in preserving and communicating information. This book is published on the occasion of an exhibition organized by the Cleveland Museum of Art that features some 170 objects from collections in Canada, Europe, Peru, and the United States. The selection covers the full range of Wari elite arts: elaborate textiles, which probably were at the core of Wari value systems; sophisticated ceramics of various styles; exquisite personal ornaments made of precious materials; carved wood containers; and works in stone and other media. The exhibition, the first in North America devoted to the arts of the Wari, was curated and the cataloged edited by Susan E. Bergh, curator of Pre-Columbian and Native North American art at the Cleveland Museum of Art."--P. [2] of cover
    Note: Catalog of an exhibition held at the Cleveland Museum of Art, Oct. 28, 2012 - Jan. 6, 2013; the Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, Feb. 10 - May 19, 2013; and the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, June 16 - Sept. 8, 2013. - Includes bibliographical references
    URL: Cover
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