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See other girls from Africa: Nude women. Swinging in Chinsali, Nude women. Swinging in Jendouba, Nude women. Swinging in Iligan
This section of our website forms the heart of the EVC project. Our contributors selected and interpreted them in their respective contexts believing that these objects are particularly important for intercultural understanding across boundaries.
Each time a user opens this page, the order in which the objects appear changes. In this way we hope to avoid a hierarchical understanding of the collected objects as their entries continue to be accessed in the long run. The constant changing face of the page also reflects the continuous expansion of the collection. As there are already over more than a hundred entries, users may want to form an overview, or to navigate through the growing collection according to their interests.
For this purpose, we offer the following search options:. Filter : This enables you to search for objects according to time, place, keywords, etc. This is an ongoing project and about to be expanded extensively. Read more …. I moved closer to the exhibit to observe its uniqueness in terms of its structural and surface characteristics. From my curious observation, I realised that the ndop fabric has simple geometrical linearity and patterns, yet, spiced with complex dynamism of the arrangements of these patterns that evoke the artistic principles of variety, harmony and technical constrast.
This treatment breaks monotony and creates multi-sectional visual interest in the fabric design despite its monochromatic colouration. These observable details, characteristic of authentic African fabric, pulled my visual curiosity to the exhibit. Indeed, it is an epitome of authentic African fabric. Africans had long developed unique structural and surface decorative techniques for creating fabrics.