February 2009 Archive

Cucurrrumacho de Navalosa AVILA

February 25th, 2009

Cucurrrumacho de Navalosa AVILA, originally uploaded by carlos gonzález ximénez.

From FOTOGRAFÍA ETNOGRÁFICA via my new favourite tumblr anthroLOLogy.

HEADS

February 24th, 2009

musicskull embalmedhead

Jane’s Oceania Home Page is a right maze of a website but there are some very nice pictures.

NEW IRELAND MULIAMA AREA MASK

February 23rd, 2009

newirelandmask

Maori

February 22nd, 2009
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Maori, originally uploaded by GPLendvai.

MAORI CHIEF

February 22nd, 2009

maoriman

Traditional Korean door art

February 20th, 2009

Originally uploaded by parhessiastes

AINU TATTOO

February 18th, 2009

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The completed lip tattoos of women were significant in regards to Ainu perceptions of life experience. First, these tattoos were believed to repel evil spirits from entering the body (mouth) and causing sickness or misfortune. Secondly, the lip tattoos indicated that a woman had reached maturity and was ready for marriage. And finally, lip tattoos assured the woman life after death in the place of her deceased ancestors.

Apart from lip tattoos, however, Ainu women wore several other tattoo marks on their arms and hands usually consisting of curvilinear and geometric designs. These motifs, which were begun as early as the fifth or sixth year, were intended to protect young girls from evil spirits…Other marks were placed on various parts of the body as charms against diseases like painful rheumatism.

http://www.vanishingtattoo.com/tattooing_among_japans_ainu.htm

http://siris-collections.si.edu/search/results.jsp?q=ainu+tattoo&x=0&y=0

NORTHERN BORNEO TATTOO

February 18th, 2009

image-9

This Kayan woman (ca. 1930) was of high rank, as evidenced
by the number of rings around her calves. The motif running up the thighs is called silong lejau (tiger’s faces). At the terminus of these bands you can barely make out a different pattern just above the horizontal lines of the calf. This is called nang klimge (“important design”) and is a degraded anthropomorph. The curclicues below the horizontal lines around the calves are called tushun tuva “the tuba root motif”). Each one of these designs was believed to repel evil forces in the jungle. The unmarked portions of her thigh are also visible

BAT PORTRAITS

February 9th, 2009

mosaicbat

ART JUNKY 3

February 7th, 2009

art-junky_09_2

I’ll be having a stall at this tomorrow with Patrick Gildersleeves. We have some nice things to sell, please come have a look! 

Art Junky 3

Sunday 8th February
11am – 4pm

Phoenix Brighton
10-14 Waterloo Place
Brighton
East Sussex
BN2 9NB
UK