Africa Indigenous People Baule artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/baule/welcome.html baule People The baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit http://www.archaeolink.com/africa_indigenous_people_baule.htm
Extractions: Baule Home Africa, African Anthropology General Resources By peoples Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi ... Zulu ArtWorld AFRICA - Baule "One of the Akan group sharing similar language and, in general, matrilineal inheritance. They broke away from the Asante of Ghana in the 18th century, bringing with them craftsmanship in gold and gold leaf decoration." - From University of Durham - http://artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/baule/welcome.html Baule People "The Baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. Three hundred years ago the Baule people migrated westward from Ghana when the Asante rose to power. The tale of how they broke away from the Asante has been preserved in their oral traditions." You will find material related to history, culture, religion, political structure, art and more. - From University of Iowa - http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Baule.html
Africa Indigenous People Resources Bangwa africa, african Anthropology General Resources. By peoples. Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi Aowin Asante Babanki Baga Bali Bamana Bamileke Bamum Bangubangu Bangwa baule http://www.archaeolink.com/africa_indigenous_people_resourc.htm
Extractions: Bangwa Home Africa, African Anthropology General Resources By peoples Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi ... Zulu ArtWorld AFRICA -Bangwa "The Bangwa occupy a mountainous and part forested countryside west of the Bamileke in south-eastern Cameroon, near the headwaters of the Cross River. They comprise nine chiefdoms. People live in separate family compounds, sometimes with large meeting houses where visitors may be received." - From University of Durham - http://artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/bangwa/welcome.html Bangwa People "Authority among the Bangwa was traditionally instituted as part of the Bamileke political complex. Like most of the western Grasslands people, Babanki political authority is vested in a village chief, who is supported by a council of elders, and is called Fon." You will find material related to Bangwa history, culture, arts, political structure and more. - From University of Iowa - http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Bangwa.html
Akwaaba Travel African Art And Music for Westerners to fully understand the indigenous perspective given leading the way with her baule, african Art visual art traditions of the peoples of africa. http://www.nas.com/africa/africaartmusic.html
Extractions: ART and MUSIC - Akwaaba Special West Africa Travel Art: In recent years it has become apparent to students of African Art that in order to understand the inherent complexities present in most African works of art, it is necessary to consider both the perspectives of the conventional Western assumptions and the indigenous perspective. This presents problems because it is difficult for Westerners to fully understand the indigenous perspective given the longstanding Western imperialistic involvement in Africa. In the traditional discipline of art history, the importance of African art has been long relegated to the role of catalyst or raw material for the creative genius of Western artists such as Pablo Picasso. However, with Susan Vogel leading the way with her Baule, African Art; Western Eyes , we are beginning to take steps toward a new look at African art - one which appreciates the methology in Western art history, but also considers the complexities of the visual art traditions of the peoples of Africa. Baule, African Art; Western Eyes
Africa South Of The Sahara - Culture And Society An annotated guide to internet resources on African culture and society. peoples include the Ashanti, Bamana, baule, Bwa, Dogon architecture, Islam and indigenous African cultures, Shawabtis http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/culture.html
Pondering The Pachyderm: The Elephant And Its Ivory In African Culture (Getty Ar Background information and activity questions that focus on Osei Bonsu's Ntan drum. cultures of West africa. Other african peoples focus on its remember that indigenous ivory use in africa never threatened the The baule peoples of Côte d'Ivoire appropriate images http://www.getty.edu/artsednet/resources/Look/Animals/ntan.html
Extractions: They have also hunted it for its abundant meat, strong hide, hair, bone, and precious tusks. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that the elephant has nourished the African imagination. Its image is creatively transformed in African art and literature. The rich and enduring presence of the elephant in African art reflects as much about human society as about the animal itself. When elephant steps on trap, no more trap. The image of the elephant appears on some of the most important ritual objects used in ancestor veneration, masquerades, and rites of passage. Yet it also adorns humble domestic objects (combs, food bowls, heddle pulleys) and commercial products (beer, detergent, and postage stamps). Sometimes the elephant is depicted in isolation, other times it is part of a complex scene.
African Studies - Art And Archaeology short essays on 'indigenous sculptural arts of South africa', 'modern' sculpture of in the lives of african peoples. This project is and Images among the baule February 19April 27 http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/indiv/area/Africa/AfArt.html
Welcome To UCLA Fowler Museum Of Cultural History and are loving statements of the value the indigenous peoples of the Southwest place on their children Sculpture of the baule peoples, Cote d'Ivoire, West africa. Gift of the http://www.fowler.ucla.edu/?content=cm&cm=past&im_sort=desc&im_order
Baule technique used to discriminate between indigenous and non artifacts from other areas of africa, ranging from the former French colony in which baule peoples live http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/jouvert/v3i3/baule.htm
Extractions: Curator Susan M. Vogel To reach the National Museum of African Art (NMAfA) from Independence Avenue, one enters through the Enid Haupt Garden. Straight ahead, looming above formal knots of flowers, rise the neo-medieval turrets of the Smithsonian Castle; pansy baskets hanging from Victorian wrought-iron street lamps conduct museum-goers from the street to the green. On either side of this entrance stand handsome contemporary buildings of polished limestone and glass: the Sackler Gallery of Asian Art on the left, the NMAfA on the right. This highly organized entrance situates a visitor within a three-dimensional emblem of colonial history. Disciplining the view, the overdeterminedly faux-European castle, which recalls the Smithsonian Institution's foundational mimicry of Britain's Royal Geographic Society, presides over a strictly ordered architectonics, consigning the galleries enclosing imperially-acquired artifacts to the periphery of 'civilized' space. On the one hand, this entrance makes visitors complicit in a colonial vision of the world, a complicity increased by having to descend below ground in order to view exhibits at the NMAfA and the Sackler. On the other hand, experiencing colonial space is an excellent introduction to a recent show at the NMAfA, "Baule: African Art/Western Eyes." Curated by Susan M. Vogel and originating at Yale University, this is an exhibit
African Studies - Art And Archaeology of illustrated short essays on indigenous sculptural arts of A handful of images of baule figure art ethnographic research among the Sherbro peoples of Sierra http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/AfArt.html
Africa Tribes by Allison Martin Ashanti, baule, Chagga, Dogon Equatorial Guinea - Bioko Island s indigenous Bubi Tribe learn how ancient African peoples crossed the http://schools.sd68.bc.ca/dove/dept/library/africa.html
Extractions: Trade Routes Art and Culture Links African Art: African Artists - artists and art galleries African Odyssey Interactive - African arts and education resources from the Kennedy Center The Craft of Basketry in Southern Africa - Iziko Museums of Cape Town South African Museum EX AFRICA - Exhibitions and Museums of African Tribal Art Ndebele - Art of an African Tribe - Margaret Courtney Clark offers photographs of colorful murals and traditional beadwork made by Ndebele woman. Includes a history of the Ndebele. NOVICA - over 180 western African masks Our Tribe: African gallery - retail site offers this page of vintage images of North African women in traditional attire Photo Gallery - One of the Largest Ancient Egyptian Photo Galleries on the Internet. TRADITIONAL AFRICAN ART - links to masks, carvings, instruments, bronzes, tapestries and more TRADITIONAL AFRICAN ART: Presentation - Among us, the profession of artist doesn't exist, we only materialize what the occult science have revealed to us and our ancestors. We are the middlemen between the earth and the further on.
Forschungen Und Studentische Praktika Translate this page Helbling, Jürg (Projektverantwortung) «indigenous peoples and Settlers Resource economic development in africa and Asia Das Beispiel der baule und Djula in http://www.ethno.unizh.ch/forschung/
Musées Afrique indigenous Knowledge in South africa Mau, Wè, Niabwa, Bete, Guro, baule, Yaure, Senufo Aquarelles de Joy Adamson peoples of Kenya http://www.unil.ch/gybn/Arts_Peuples/Ex_Africa/ex_Af_musaf.html
Extractions: Cape Town South African National Gallery Government Avenue ma-di 10-17 Arts de la perle / Expositions temporaires Cape Town Gold of Africa Museum . Martin Melck House 96 Strand Street Bijoux d'or d'Afrique de l'Ouest (coll Barbier-Mueller); objets d'or des civilisations d'Afrique australe Cape Town - Gardens South African Museum 25 Queen Victoria Street lu-di 10-17 terres cuites de Lydenburg San (peintures rupestres), Zimb abwe Tsonga , Khoikhoi, Sotho, Nguni, Shona, Lovedu... Exposition " Ulwazi Lwemvelo - Indigenous Knowledge in South Africa Cape Town - Rosebank University of Cape Town Irma Stern Museum Cecil Road ma-sa 10-17 Arts de Zanzibar et du Congo: Lega, Luba Durban Art Gallery City Hall lu-sa 8.30-16; di 11-16 Durban Local History Museum Aliwal Street East London East London Museum lu-ve 9.30-17; sa 9.30-12
Books On African Art - Tribal Art Of Africa baule African Art, Western Eyes by Susan Mullin rather than the cultural traditions, of African peoples. Living in Morocco celebrates the indigenous arts of http://www.dropbears.com/b/broughsbooks/art/african_art.htm
Extractions: Book Description: One of the leading collections of African art in the world, the African collection at Berlinâs Ethnological Museum contains important masterpieces from many different regions of the continent. This stunning book includes more than two hundred color and black-and-white reproductions of masks, ceremonial figures, musical instruments, and objects of everyday life from throughout Africa. Among the jewels in the museum are the Ife Collection from Nigeria; rare Benin bronzes; Afro-Portuguese ivories; magical figures from the Lower Congo and a host of East African sculpture and masks that have gained increasing attention in recent years. Essays by leading ethnologists supply important cultural and historical information on each region, as well as fascinating insights into the ways European and African art have traded influences over the centuries.
UIUC Media Center Contacts 120 Baobab 75 Barcelona, Spain 523 baule people 276(19 shows causes and effects of africa s many political way of life of its indigenous peoples; describes the http://gateway.library.uiuc.edu/ugl/mrc/africana_bib.html
New Jersey AAH Curriculum Guide - Unit 1 Kikuyu of Kenya, and the baule of Ivory manner, africa s triple heritage of indigenous traditions, Islamic anthropological study of african peoples and their http://www.njstatelib.org/NJ_Information/Digital_Collections/AAHCG/unit1.html
Extractions: African Beginnings The word Africa was used by the ancient Romans to refer to their colonial province in the area that is present-day Tunisia and eastern Algeria. Its possible derivations are the Latin word aprica , meaning "sunny", and the Greek word aphrike , meaning "without cold." Archeological finds suggest that Africa is the cradle of humankind. The earliest fossil remains of humans, however one defines human , have been found in eastern and southern Africa. For example, if being human is defined as bipedality ("walking upright"), then the remains found in Ethiopia in 1974 of a four-million-year-old apelike creature apply. If defined as "making tools" (tools from stones that were sharpened or flattened), then the fossilized remains unearthed in 1986 in Tanzania's Olduvai Gorge are particularly significant. About two million years old, they were those of Homo habilus , the first toolmaker. (Even more recent studies have led to the conclusion that humans first learned to fashion sophisticated tools in Africa, not in Europe, as many experts had thought. These tools, carved from the ribs of large mammals, include double-pointed blades with carved barbs and single points with ridges that could have been used for attachment to spear shafts. They were discovered in Zaire along its border with Uganda and are said to be between 75,000 to 90,000 years old.) If "using fire" defines being human, then the one-million-year-old remains found at Kenya's Lake Turkana of
Welcome To UCLA Fowler Museum Of Cultural History and are loving statements of the value the indigenous peoples of the as People Figurative Sculpture of the baule peoples, Cote d Ivoire, West africa Gift of http://www.fowler.ucla.edu/incEngine/?content=cm&cm=past&im_sort=desc&im_order=e
Report On The Implementation Of The Plan Of with those groups (women, indigenous peoples, children, migrants africa Adja Afrikaans Akuapem Twi Amharic Arabic Asante Bambara Baoulé/baule Batonu (Bariba http://www.unhchr.ch/huridocda/huridoca.nsf/(Symbol)/E.CN.4.1999.87.En?OpenDocum
T4 Questions Review Only the baule make a feast fork. E and S Other a. Malangatana. 44. _ the general name given to the indigenous peoples of northern africa. 45. http://www.members.aol.com/romaprofse/africa/t4/t4.q.rev.wo-ans.html
Extractions: (zim-¥bb-wE*) g. terra-cotta heads h. masks i. Albania E and S Other (often crossing stylistic, ethno., and continental divisions) Souvenir Art 31._ Wakamba mostly use two types of wood. One is a local, very hard, two-toned wood, dark brown with a very light brown outer layer, called muvuvuu. Recently they have been using ebony, imported from (tan-zÂ-¥nE-Â) Tanzania, a two-toned wood that is black with an outer white layer, because it is very popular in -?- . Neo-East and S. Africa
Social Dynamics Of Adolescent Fertility In Sub-Saharan Africa Igbo of Nigeria and the baule of the Callaway, A. 1964 Nigeria s indigenous education The apprentice BC 1972 The Gbandes The peoples ofLiberianHinterland. http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309048974/html/185-208.htm