Among the spectacular items in the Asian collections of the musée du quai Branly - Jacques Chirac, the ancient objects collected in the far east of Siberia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries are of particular interest, representing the interaction between the world of men, untamed nature and the world of the spirits.
About the exhibition
Protective robes in fish skin with ritual accessories decorated with symbolic volutes and spirals and everyday objects combining refined yet natural materials and decoration: eclectic and little known objects from the Amur river basin blend aesthetic elegance and ethnographic interest. These are today among the treasures of the musée du quai Branly - Jacques Chirac's collection.
The exhibition will present the decorative art of the peoples of the Amur river basin; an art which embodies meaning and reveals the specific ontological construction of these peoples in their relationship with the visible and invisible world. The peoples presented – Nivkh, Nanai, the Ainu, Orotch and Hezhe (a Chinese minority) – founded their ways of life prior to the mid-20th century on the river Amur, which was their source of life and prosperity. The Nivkh, Nanai and the Ainu are linked by the shared practice of the bear ritual; all of these populations are linked by the same ethnolinguistic matrix and the same practices of hunting and fishing for salmonids. The ancient Chinese sources describe the inhabitants of this region of the Amur river as "barbarians with fish skin"...
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Curator
- Daria Cevoli, Head of Asia Collections
- Place: Mezzanine est
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TimeSlots:
From Tuesday 03 November 2015 at Sunday 17 January 2016 -
Closed on mondayTuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 10:30 am-07:00 pmThursday: 10:30 am-10:00 pm
- Public: All publics
- Categorie : Exhibitions