Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Desert Jewels: North African Jewelry and Photography from the Xavier Guerrand-Hermes Collection


On Display: September 4, 2010 - December 5, 2010

An exhibition of spectacular jewelry and historic photographs from Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Egypt, and Tunisia, Desert Jewels presents never-before-exhibited pieces of stunning North African jewelry and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century photographs by some of the period’s most prominent photographers.

Collected over three decades by Xavier Guerrand-Hermès,Desert Jewels illuminates the diversity and beauty of traditional North African jewelry design. Ornate necklaces, bracelets, rings, and earrings show the inventive compositions and dazzling creations of North African jewelry designers and silver workers. Crafted from combinations of silver, coral, amber, coins, and semiprecious stones, the exquisite collection includes wedding necklaces, hair ornaments, bracelets, earrings, and fibula used to keep veils in place. The jewelry shows both the common threads that run through North African societies and local variations in materials and motifs.

North African jewelry came to the attention of Western collectors in the nineteenth century, when North Africa’s historic monuments and archaeological sites were being explored, visited, and, in some cases, pillaged. The most important photographers of the day, including the Scotsman George Washington Wilson, the Neurdine brothers from France, and the Turkish photographer Pascal Sabah, visited the region and photographed landscapes, architecture, markets, and people adorned in their jewels.

Organizer - Desert Jewels: North African Jewelry and Photography from the Xavier Guerrand-Hermès Collection is organized by the Museum for African Art, New York

Sponsors - This exhibition is supported, in part, by the Robert Lehman Foundation.

Curator - Dilys Blum, The Jack M. and Annette Y. Friedland Senior Curator of Costume and Textiles

Location - Spain Gallery, Perelman Building


Source: Philadelphia Museum of Art

http://philamuseum.org/exhibitions.391.html




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