Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • Visit
  • Exhibitions & Events
  • Art & Design
  • Give
  • Search

Visit Main Menu Block

  • Hours & Admission
  • Accessibility & Amenities
  • Tours & Group Visits
  • Visitor Guidelines

Exhibitions and Events Main Menu Block

  • Exhibitions
  • Events

Art and Design Main Menu Block

  • Collection
  • Collection Research
  • Past Exhibitions
  • Watch / Listen / Read

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum
Installation view of Being and Believing in the Natural World: Perspectives from the Ancient Mediterranean, Asia, and Indigenous North America on view 10-22-2022 through 06-04-2023 at the RISD Museum.

Being and Believing in the Natural World

Perspectives from the Ancient Mediterranean, Asia, and Indigenous North America
October 22, 2022 - June 4, 2023
Installation view of Being and Believing in the Natural World: Perspectives from the Ancient Mediterranean, Asia, and Indigenous North America on view 10-22-2022 through 06-04-2023 at the RISD Museum.

Introduction

Human relationships with the natural world are explored across these ancient Mediterranean, Asian, and Indigenous North American objects. Rather than searching for similarities across cultures, this exhibition embraces the layers of meaning that emerge in bringing these different perceptions together. Dating from 2000 BCE to the present day, many of these objects could be presented within multiple contexts. Grouped as they are, they consider how diverse makers interacted with the natural world and suggest points of departure for thinking about our own narratives today.

Across the exhibition labels, different terminology describes the makers and their affiliations. “Artist once known” is used for Indigenous North American art and “unidentified maker(s)” for objects from Asia and the ancient Mediterranean. Specific geographical locations of origin are included when known, as are cultural designations. The information for each object is formatted to reflect current leading practices in the study of ancient, Asian, and Indigenous North American art.


Gina Borromeo (GB), former chief curator and curator of ancient art

Wai Yee Chiong (WC), associate curator of Asian art

Sháńdíín Brown (SB), Henry Luce Curatorial Fellow for Native American Art 


RISD Museum is supported by a grant from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts, through an appropriation by the Rhode Island General Assembly and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and with the generous partnership of the Rhode Island School of Design, its Board of Trustees, and Museum Governors.

Exhibition images

view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image
view exhibition image

Related Objects

Unknown Maker, Roman

Satyr, (Imperial Period, 27 BCE-393 CE)
Terracotta onion-shaped jar with two black arched handles and black stripes, decorated with floral and geometric patterns and illustrations of two men battling each other with two onlookers

Unknown Maker, Greek

Storage Jar (Amphora), Archaic (Greek)
Front-view of a terracotta sculpted hand, cropped at the wrist, holding a dove. The cross-section face where the hand has been cropped is connected to a transparent tube.

Unknown Maker, Etruscan

Hand Holding a Dove, Hellenistic
Black vessel with a wide entrance and two short handles whose surface is decorated by an orange scene of figures engaged in ritual dancing and music framed by geometric patterns.

Pothos Painter

Mixing Bowl (Krater), Classical
An almond shaped embroidered cap, which features 3 blocks of blue, white, green, and pink floral embroidery which are framed and divided by blue, pink, and white geometric patterns.

Unknown Maker, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois)

Glengarry cap
Rectangular print of black tadpole-like forms arranged in an organic, oblong shape, surrounded by thin black cross hatching marks going in various directions.

Xu Bing 徐冰

Life Pond from Five Series of Repetitions
A white cloth painting of six trees in orange soil against a bright blue background with white clouds and green foreground, hung behind a wooden table with various objects.

Yutaka Sone 曽根裕

African Landscape
Silver and turquoise necklace. The chain features turquoise stones set within silver rectangular ornaments threaded into two rows of beaded chains. The central pendant is a turquoise stone-set horseshoe shape.

Unknown Maker, Diné (Navajo)

Necklace
  • More objects +

Being and Believing in the Natural World : Perspectives from the Ancient Mediterranean, Asia, and Indigenous North America

October 22, 2022 - June 4, 2023
Download Checklist pdf

/

Download

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum

Footer Main Navigation

  • Visit

    • Hours & Admission
    • Accessibility & Amenities
    • Tours & Group Visits
    • Visitor Guidelines
  • Art & Design

    • Collection Research
    • Collection
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Join / Give

    • Become a Member
    • Give
  • Exhibitions & Events

    • Exhibitions
    • Events
  • Watch / Listen / Read

    • The Latest
    • Publications
    • Articles
    • Audio & Video

Footer Secondary Navigation

  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Image Request
  • Press Office
  • Rent the Museum
  • Terms of Use
Tickets
Homepage
Go to the risd.edu homepage. This link will open in a new window.