Bourgogne Tribal Show 2022

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • Shows the galleries with traditional African and Oceanic Art ('Tribal Art') at the Bourgogne Tribal Show 2022. The fair took place from May 19 to 22 2022.
    Filmed (with a smartphone) and commented by Ingo Barlovic
    0:00 Introduction
    0:20 Serra, Flak
    3:41 Schlag, Woerner
    5:49 Floch, Marcelin
    8:05 Dodier, Galerie HB
    9:39 Meyer, Montagut
    11:50 Rolley, Punchinello
    #tribalart #africanart #oceanicart #indigenousart

Komentáře • 14

  • @Futurist1001
    @Futurist1001 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for sharing Ingo! :)

  • @tribalartcollector
    @tribalartcollector Před 2 lety +2

    Great show review as usual!

  • @henrylivingstone2971
    @henrylivingstone2971 Před rokem

    Wow! Is that a Cheyenne eagle feather war bonnet at 2:30! Now that’s a really rare piece! Not only because eagle feathers are illegal in the US but because few exist outside the US tribes.

  • @primevalseeker3952
    @primevalseeker3952 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful presentation Ingo. Thanks for this The Toraja stands out as a masterwork for me.

  • @DavidNorden
    @DavidNorden Před 2 lety

    Another fantastic video from master Ingo !

  • @about-africa3459
    @about-africa3459  Před 2 lety

    The first object should be a Lobi, not a Loba :-) But for Serra it is a Fon. The rare Rolley figure whose name I forgot is made by the Guerze. And Frank Marcelin informed me that: "Just note that it was not shields but ancestral gope collected by Thomas Schultze Westrum"

  • @d.l.7399
    @d.l.7399 Před 2 lety +2

    Ingo, your videos get better and better. Nice filmed! All the objects you like, especially from Africa, are 'definitively not my cup of tea' - too primitive, too clumsy, too unelegant, and so on, but, ok, the world goes round... and your next beautiful vid will come!

    • @about-africa3459
      @about-africa3459  Před 2 lety +1

      German Taste 😉

    • @d.l.7399
      @d.l.7399 Před 2 lety

      @@about-africa3459 no, I mean, you should see it that way: trusting more into yourself, BEING worth to own 'better' quality. Sorry...

    • @about-africa3459
      @about-africa3459  Před 2 lety

      @@d.l.7399 ? To be honest. I am in this Tribal Art thing for more than 20 years. And I love powerful objects which do not look interchangeable. I saw so many elegant... pieces, which are just boring. And sometimes 'clumsy' objects are much more interesting than the nicly carved Luba sculpture no. 100. All the best.

  • @mick20227
    @mick20227 Před rokem

    Did we destroy all these tribes?

    • @henrylivingstone2971
      @henrylivingstone2971 Před rokem

      Nah, they still exist they just don’t make money from slaves and ivory anymore

    • @henrylivingstone2971
      @henrylivingstone2971 Před rokem

      @UCIESx6tL9BT4Bfga4j6rsQg
      It’s absolutely historically truthful to pin slavery on native Africans. They are not wholly the victims. Most great African civilizations made their fortunes in the trade of slaves, ivory, gold and control of trade routes.
      You’re white washing a great deal of the horrific slavery that happened on the African continent.
      I never said that Europeans weren’t guilty of slavery, highlighting the crimes of one demographic doesn’t exonerate that of another.
      You speak of “ancient treatment of slaves” and I assume you’re basing the relative ethical treatment of slaves during the Roman and Greek periods. Slavery in Africa might’ve followed such ethical treatment in ancient settings but that was not true during the 18th-20th centuries.
      In fact it was Dr. Livingstone, the missionary, explorer, and abolitionist, who noted how cruel and evil the native slave traders in Africa were. He wrote that slaves would be marched by restraints on their necks connected to each other and would be whipped women and children included. And that at times slaves would die but wouldn’t be disconnected and would have to be dragged by their fellow slaves. So not so ethical. Emancipation was not a choice in Africa during the height of the slave trade and there were little to no limits of the treatment of slaves.
      Racial discrimination was a fairly late concept in international slavery. It was only during the late 18th century that Europeans started to justify their participation in the institution of slavery citing superiority on the basis of race.
      But it was the Europeans who ultimately abolished slavery and eradicated it from the world. It was only by the destruction of the Benin, the largest slave traders in Africa, that slavery subsided in Africa.
      So social discrimination aside, it was ultimately Europeans that outlawed the practice of slavery.

  • @OutofAfrikah
    @OutofAfrikah Před 2 lety

    Visit our Store
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