| Titre : |
Fleuve Congo : arts d'Afrique centrale ; correspondances et mutations des formes |
| Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
| Auteurs : |
François Neyt, Auteur ; Musée du quai Branly, Auteur |
| Editeur : |
Paris [France] : Musée du quai Branly |
| Année de publication : |
2010 |
| Importance : |
405 p. |
| Présentation : |
ill. en coul., couv. ill. en coul. |
| Format : |
30 cm |
| ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
978-90-6153-914-8 |
| Note générale : |
Ouvrage publié a l'occasion de l'exposition "Fleuve Congo. Arts d'Afrique centrale", présentée au musée du quai Branly, du 22 juin au 3 octobre 2010, puis du 10 décembre 2010 au 11 avril 2011 a l'Asian civilisations Museum de Singapour
Bibliogr. p. 401-405 |
| Langues : |
Français (fre) |
| Catégories : |
Art -- Catalogues d'exposition -- Afrique centrale ; Art -- Congo (République) -- Exhibitions ; Art -- Gabon -- Exhibitions ; Art congolaise (République démocratique) -- Exhibitions ; Sculpture -- Catalogues d'exposition -- Afrique centrale
|
| Index. décimale : |
730.967 074 |
| Résumé : |
Two large biotopes extend from either bank of the river Congo, which acts as both border and link between the different societies living on either side. In the northern Republic of Congo and what has been called the Congo basin are the cultural traditions of the forested equatorial zones: to the south lie the lands of the subequatorial savannah, which saw the gradual emergence of large kingdoms (Kongo, Tio, Kuba, Luba). In Gabon the forest cultures and savannah kingdoms are linked and separated by the country's central river, the Ogooue?. Though the production of these two biotopes is diverse, it nevertheless shows a remarkable unity where both the respective institutions of these peoples and their artistic output are concerned. For example, the Kota reliquaries of northern Gabon gradually become more convex and highly decorated in the south, and the same is true of the Punu masks, the famous 'white masks', which become more realistic in the sphere of influence of the Kongo kingdom |
Fleuve Congo : arts d'Afrique centrale ; correspondances et mutations des formes [texte imprimé] / François Neyt, Auteur ; Musée du quai Branly, Auteur . - Paris (France) : Musée du quai Branly, 2010 . - 405 p. : ill. en coul., couv. ill. en coul. ; 30 cm. ISBN : 978-90-6153-914-8 Ouvrage publié a l'occasion de l'exposition "Fleuve Congo. Arts d'Afrique centrale", présentée au musée du quai Branly, du 22 juin au 3 octobre 2010, puis du 10 décembre 2010 au 11 avril 2011 a l'Asian civilisations Museum de Singapour
Bibliogr. p. 401-405 Langues : Français ( fre)
| Catégories : |
Art -- Catalogues d'exposition -- Afrique centrale ; Art -- Congo (République) -- Exhibitions ; Art -- Gabon -- Exhibitions ; Art congolaise (République démocratique) -- Exhibitions ; Sculpture -- Catalogues d'exposition -- Afrique centrale
|
| Index. décimale : |
730.967 074 |
| Résumé : |
Two large biotopes extend from either bank of the river Congo, which acts as both border and link between the different societies living on either side. In the northern Republic of Congo and what has been called the Congo basin are the cultural traditions of the forested equatorial zones: to the south lie the lands of the subequatorial savannah, which saw the gradual emergence of large kingdoms (Kongo, Tio, Kuba, Luba). In Gabon the forest cultures and savannah kingdoms are linked and separated by the country's central river, the Ogooue?. Though the production of these two biotopes is diverse, it nevertheless shows a remarkable unity where both the respective institutions of these peoples and their artistic output are concerned. For example, the Kota reliquaries of northern Gabon gradually become more convex and highly decorated in the south, and the same is true of the Punu masks, the famous 'white masks', which become more realistic in the sphere of influence of the Kongo kingdom |
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