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All Essays

African Art in The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
Series
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African patrons and entrepreneurs quickly picked up the new technology, which circulated and flourished through local and global networks of exchange. Photographers, clients, and images moved across the region often traversing both national and ethnic boundaries.
Giulia Paoletti
March 1, 2017
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The Museum of Primitive Art’s focus on works linked to a single cultural or ethnic group was unprecedented, and it created a standard for exhibitions of African art that endured throughout the twentieth century.
Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
May 1, 2016
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Images on scrolls are nonrepresentational talismanic designs that reveal mysteries and enhance the effectiveness of written prayers.
Kristen Windmuller-Luna
April 1, 2015
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The Lalibela churches take their form, placement, and orientation from both geological features and structures within the complex.
Kristen Windmuller-Luna
September 1, 2014
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Combining functionality, exacting skills, and visually dazzling graphic elements, the wide range of basketry artifacts created by elite Tutsi women from Rwanda and Burundi represent the apogee of refinement.
Yaëlle Biro
March 1, 2011
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[Power associations] are dynamic institutions that respond to local contexts and historical change and thus exhibit great variability.
Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
January 1, 2010
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Senufo Sculpture from West Africa and its precursor [exhibition] set a precedent for the exhibition and study of African art that prevailed for decades.
Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
January 1, 2010
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Poro has historically been responsible for the transmission of histories, genealogies, and other knowledge and has contributed to diverse and dynamic artistic production in northern Côte d’Ivoire.
Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
January 1, 2010
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Diviners invest in the arts to foster personal relationships with the spirit world and enhance communication between nature spirits and humans.
Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
January 1, 2010
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With the rise of the transatlantic trade through the seventeenth into nineteenth centuries, ivory became among the most valuable African natural resources desired by Western industry.
Nichole N. Bridges
March 1, 2009