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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.

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Related Objects

Unknown Maker, Chinese

Duck, Qing Dynasty
Wooden carving of a face with hands holding onto a deer’s antlers, painted in reds, blues, and ochres. It is framed by a turquoise border patterned with iridescent shell inlays.

Unknown Maker, Tlingit

Frontlet (Shakee.at)
Dark brown sculpture of the head of a jackal. The ears are large and pointed and the snout is long and rather narrow. The worn surface shows hints of terracotta.

Unknown Maker, Egyptian

Head of Anubis, Ancient
Monochromatic photographic print of a leafy, slanted, tall tree with large hanging leaves touching the floor. It is split into a 3 by 3 grid.

Kurita Kōichirō 栗田紘一郎

Weeping Beech V Southold Long Island, NY
Top-view of the worn brown ceramic bowl with black patterning of animals walking along its rim surrounded by floral motifs. A small dome rises from the bowl's wide, unpainted center.

Unknown Maker, Greek

Bowl (Phiale), Archaic (Greek)
Tall black and orange onion-shaped jar with a pinched mouth forming a spout and a handle. It is decorated with natural and geometric patterns and illustrations of a sphynx.

Phineus painter

Wine Jug (Oinochoe) with Sphinx, Archaic (Greek)
Print of a reddish-brown cloudy mountain side with wispy green trees and  figures in uniform clothing and yellow hats climbing it, against a pale sky with a striking blue horizon.

Katsushika Hokusai 葛飾北斎

Mountain climbers (諸人登山 Shojin tozan), Edo (Japanese period)
Standing light-jade and brown sculpture of a standing person with a tall head, narrow torso, and straight arms. The left leg has brown specks on it while the headdress is light and translucent.

Unknown Maker, Egyptian

Horus Amulet, Ptolemaic period
  • 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
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