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lunedì 9 ottobre 2017

Art of Kiribati - La scomparsa di Kiribati

La scomparsa di Kiribati

la vita sul piccolo paese dell'Oceania, che rischia di non esistere più entro il 2100 a causa del riscaldamento globale

Kiribati

  

A sharks’ tooth sword, rere, from Kiribati Island, Micronesia. The teeth are lashed to grooves in the edge of the wood with coconut fiber, and there is a fiber rope attached to the handle. It measures 28” long and is missing a few teeth as shown in the photos below. From a European collection. Early 20th century.




 Casino Flag Of Kiribati by Slot Machine


 Early 20th century Micronesian armour from Kiribati.

Robin White in Kiribati


Kiribati sculpture

 ROBIN WHITE I am doing the washing in the bathroom 1984
woodblock, 148 x 198 mm.

 ROBIN WHITE The Name of this girl is FIorence 1984
woodblock, 148 x 198 mm.

ROBIN WHITE The Canoe in the Bareaka 1984
woodblock, 148 x 198 mm.

 ROBIN WHITE Michael is asleep on the bed 1984
woodblock, 148 x 198 mm.

ROBIN WHITE The Maneaba 1984
woodblock, 148 x 198 mm.

Robin White 1984
(photograph by Claudia Pond Eyley)

  


the dying culture of Kiribati
 Casper Sheardowns



 Kiribati

Assumptions: Kiribati Man, by Robert Armstrong

 The interactive installation in the Kiribati pavilion

 Institute ERGO SUM, 2017, Inauguration of the Kiribati Pavilion

 Institute ERGO SUM, 2017, Inauguration of the Kiribati Pavilion

 Kiribati Warriors Protects, interactive animation, installation, 2017 © Daniela Danica Tepes, Courtesy the Artist

ceremonial daggers from Kiribati, made from coconut wood and a straw material made from pandanus

 Man's dance mat from Fanning Island, Kiribati, Honolulu Museum of Art accession

 Kiribati Warriors

 An Ethnographic Analysis of a Kiribati Shark-Toothed Sword - Blackboard Collaborate Support - UCL Wiki





 Mike Cooper - New Kiribati 

 I-Kiribati warrior in woven coconut with blowfish helmet and sharktooth club

 Religion in Kiribati


 Families from Kiribati’s outer atolls are flocking to South Tarawa for jobs, education, and health care, swelling the population to more than 50,000. Newcomers are often forced to live in marginal areas prone to flooding by high tides.

 A wrecked fishing vessel serves as a diving platform for Tarawa youngsters, who grow up in, on, and always within sight and sound of the ocean. This and coming generations face tough climate challenges as warming, rising, acidifying seas threaten life on their native islands.

  a complex burial ritual for their dead.

 A man of Kiribati


una poco invitante immagine dell'isola deserta di Enderbury  

 

Kiribati: The Islands Being Destroyed By Climate Change | AJ+ Docs

AJ+

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