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Natural Fashion: Tribal Decoration from Africa

por Hans Silvester

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1104251,341 (4.29)2
Over the course of numerous voyages to Africa's Omo Valley, Hans Silvester became fascinated by the beauty of the Surma, Mursi, Hamer and Kurma tribes, who share a taste for body painting and extravagant decorations borrowed from nature. This collection of photographs captures these accoutrements.
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On second thought this feels sort of touristic. No names, little commentary, buck naked beautiful people in floral headdresses. I bought this at the same time I bought "Maske" which is richly annotated but this is kind of anonymous and pornographic like early Nat Geo or "The Secret Museum of Mankind." ( )
  uncleflannery | May 16, 2020 |
Outrageously beautiful photographs of (mostly) adolescents decorating themselves in the manner of adolescents everywhere- but these tribal kids use what they have to hand, brilliantly. Lovely, lovely photos. ( )
  satyridae | Apr 5, 2013 |
every picture is different but of course they are samey. you have to look at each picture as unique and the whole book as a ?
the review by cocoafiend is interesting and i think i agree with it. ( )
  mahallett | Mar 11, 2011 |
This book is a photographic study of the body ornamentation practices of the Surma and Mursi tribes, who live in the remote Omo valley at the border of Ethiopia, Kenya and Sudan. They make use of body paint and natural accessories such as jewelry and head coverings made of roots, gourds, grasses, flowers, fruits, feathers, shells and leaves. This is not a ritual practice undertaken for special occasions - rather it's something the Surma and Mursi do naturally and daily as an expression of creativity born of a close relationship with nature. The photographs in the book are quite beautiful and demonstrate the tribes' varied and playful use of ornamentation and body patterning.

Unfortunately, the text accompanying this book is entirely inadequate to situating this practice culturally. Four paltry pages discuss, in fairly sweeping terms, the materials deployed, the sculptural surface of the body, the social practice of painting one another, the role of body art in seduction, and the unfortunate impact of tourism in turning a natural practice into a self-conscious and paid industry.

Silvester's total lack of self-reflexivity is a bit troubling too. While complaining that these cultures are being destroyed by tourism, he expresses no hint of the book's role in this process - by exhibiting these art practices as spectacle in a glossy book of photographs (of bodies always in danger of being fetishized), does Silvester not participate in promoting tourism to the Omo valley? Likewise, when he describes the destructive economy of the foreign gaze (paying for photos of 'exotic' subjects), he fails to explain the context in which his own photographs were taken. What did his subjects understand of his purpose? Did he pay them? In some areas, payment for photos of tribal body ornamentation has become compulsory. Silvester suggests that threatened violence is not a rare occurrence when expected payment isn't tendered. Given this context, it seems likely that Silvester paid as well. Yet why does he represent commercial photography (his own) as outside of his critique of the destructive impact of these payments on the tribes - who, he argues, are losing touch with the naturalness of their practices and beginning to experience them as artificial performances for outsiders? These important questions are never addressed.

If Natural Fashion is meant to be a visual anthropological record, there really needs to be far more context for understanding the photographs as something more than objects of beauty for the western gaze. That said, the photographs in themselves are fascinating inasmuch as they demonstrate the ubiquity of fashion as a human practice and stunningly illustrate the power and breadth of ornamentation that can be quickly derived from nature. ( )
  cocoafiend | Sep 3, 2010 |
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Over the course of numerous voyages to Africa's Omo Valley, Hans Silvester became fascinated by the beauty of the Surma, Mursi, Hamer and Kurma tribes, who share a taste for body painting and extravagant decorations borrowed from nature. This collection of photographs captures these accoutrements.

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