Painting
Item number 3595/53 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number 3595/53 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Vertical painting of a stylized anthropomorphic figure with the head pointed up, toward the top of the canvas. The figure has orange dots on either side and is decorated with orange and white lines, circles, zigzags, semicircles, and dots. To the right of the figure is a long line that ends in a point facing downward, toward the bottom of the cloth. This line has smaller lines extending from the top left side toward the face of the figure. The space around the bottom of the figure is filled with repeating brown lines, mostly on the left side. The left side of these lines contains concentric orange and white circles. The canvas is stretched on a wooden stretcher and held in place by nails. Dark red-brown paint marks are on the back; ink label on the lower right side of the stretcher.
Collected by Fred Haack in South Sudan. Haack said he spent "a great deal of time in Juba" from 1979-c. 1982, where he acquired 80 Dinka paintings. Haack wrote that the paintings were made by "a young Dinka tribesman who went to a missionary school for a few months and, with no training, put paint to canvas." The artist's name in unknown. Haack gave 70 of the paintings to the Museum of Civilization in 1994. In 1996 he gave the last 10 to the Kelowna Museum (now Okanagan Heritage Museum).
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Vertical painting of a stylized anthropomorphic figure with the head pointed up, toward the top of the canvas. The figure has orange dots on either side and is decorated with orange and white lines, circles, zigzags, semicircles, and dots. To the right of the figure is a long line that ends in a point facing downward, toward the bottom of the cloth. This line has smaller lines extending from the top left side toward the face of the figure. The space around the bottom of the figure is filled with repeating brown lines, mostly on the left side. The left side of these lines contains concentric orange and white circles. The canvas is stretched on a wooden stretcher and held in place by nails. Dark red-brown paint marks are on the back; ink label on the lower right side of the stretcher.
Collected by Fred Haack in South Sudan. Haack said he spent "a great deal of time in Juba" from 1979-c. 1982, where he acquired 80 Dinka paintings. Haack wrote that the paintings were made by "a young Dinka tribesman who went to a missionary school for a few months and, with no training, put paint to canvas." The artist's name in unknown. Haack gave 70 of the paintings to the Museum of Civilization in 1994. In 1996 he gave the last 10 to the Kelowna Museum (now Okanagan Heritage Museum).
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