:The Muckenthaler Cultural Center presents "Vanishing Worlds: The
Art of Cultural Adornment" from January 15 to April 17, with a
special membership opening on January 14.
The exhibit is a celebration of the techniques and styles of
personal cultural adornment by indigenous people from Africa,
Asia and the Americas. Many pieces in the exhibition are from 100
to 200 years old and several are much older. Textiles and
photographs augment the exhibit, providing additional examples of
style and context. Included in the show are more than 350
individual original pieces.
There will be a complimentary gallery tour of the exhibit on
Sunday, February 27, from 2 to 4 pm. Accompanied by the tour will
be a lecture/slide presentation, "Barter, Blood and Beauty, Beads
in the Age of Discovery," presented by Wolfgang Schlink, owner of
Tribal Earth Gallery, jewelry maker and bead enthusiast. The
lecture will focus on the role beads play in the fascinating
story of exploration and exploitation throughout history.
A benefit dinner will follow at 6 to 9 pm to raise funds to
support the exhibition. This event, which costs $75, will include
a multicultural dinner featuring traditional foods from the
Americas, Africa and Asia, as well as a gallery talk and "try on"
session for those in attendance.
"As far as I know this is the first show if its kind on the West
Coast and certainly a very rare show for the United States," said
Patricia House, curator of the exhibit and director of the
Muckenthaler Cultural Center. House stressed that the exhibit is
more extensive than a bead show since there will be neck pieces,
earrings, bracelets, anklets and head dresses, as well as
textiles to help focus the viewer on the entire ensemble and its
position in the history of the culture.
"Bead lovers will have the opportunity to see beads strung as
pieces of adornment, but the focus is on the heritage of the
entire piece of jewelry and the people who created and wore the
piece," explained House. The objects come in assorted materials,
including shells, brass, tin, rope, vegetable materials and
others.
Included among the exhibit's stunning pieces will be items from
tribal groups such as the Samburu from Kenya, the Masai from
Tanzania, the Zulu from South Africa, the Dogon from Mali and the
Tuareg from the Sahara. Among the alluring treasures from Asia
are examples of various Hilltribe groups from Southeast Asia.
Other featured exotic ornamentation includes representations of
the Naga from Burma, silver pieces with Hindu influence from
India, a headdress from Afghanistan and Geisha adornment from
Japan. In the Americas, examples of pre-Columbian gold pieces,
Mexican folk art and southwest Native American collections from
groups including Pueblo, Navajo and Hopi cultures will be
showcased.
An illustrated exhibition catalog, Vanishing Worlds: The Art
of Cultural Adornment, will be available at the exhibition
opening. The catalog's author and curator of the exhibition
shares details on how tradition and belief systems influenced
design of different cultures.
The Muckenthaler Cultural Center is at 1201 West Malvern
Avenue. For information, 714-738-6595 or .