Feature Articles


September Issue 2001

Gibbes Museum Of Art in Charleston, SC, Features Exhibition of Masks

On Sept. 21, Spirit of the Mask, an exhibition that has made headlines all over the Nation, will open at the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC. These masks are more than just simple disguises; they turn the secular world into the sacred and the mundane into the magical. In festivals and holidays around the world, these masks elevate humans into the realm of gods and demons alike. They exude a power that is both magical and evocative.

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Dominican Republic -------------------------------------------------Hungary

For centuries, the mask has been a part of rituals that involve musicians, singers and dancers. They have also functioned to personify spirits, gods or ancestors, to assume social control, to educate or to elude responsibility for one's actions. Mask performances have been important in rituals on the Indonesian Island of Bali. Some masks in Burma are even presented with offerings on a regular basis and are segregated according to their good or evil tendencies.


Mexico ------------------------------------- India

The masks in this exhibition date from early 1900's, and are often carved from wood, and decorated with a variety of local materials. Special masks are enhanced with boar's teeth, horsehair, jewels, gold leaf, coins, buffalo hide, goat hair, rabbit pelts, feathers, mirrors and even blood. Animal masks are especially known for having moveable mouths and protruding eyes with wide pupils.

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Democratic Republic of Congo ------------- Cameroon Grasslands

Because of their beauty and power, masks can be seen in museums and appreciated as works of art. This display introduces the multiple cultures of five continents, more than forty countries, and eleven Native American tribes. Some of the countries include Bali, Hungary, Burma, India, Brazil, Bolivia, Denmark, Germany, Mexico, Guatemala, New Guinea as well as eleven African countries.

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Alaska ------------------------- British Columbia (BC) ---- Vancouver Island, BC

To emphasize the masks' authentic cultural usage, photographs and prints will accompany each display. This exhibition will end at the Gibbes on Nov. 18, 2001, and will then travel to fifteen museums across the US over the next two years.

For more info check our SC Institutional Gallery listings or call the museum at 843/722-2706 and at (http://www.gibbes.com).

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