Susan Matthews

Susan Matthews
Susan Matthews
Susan Matthews

Susan Matthews

More Posts from Tibonanj and Others

3 months ago
Figure Animalière Sur Une Production Culturelle Du Groupe Aluku, En Guyane. Le Serpent Est Animal Privilégié

Figure animalière sur une production culturelle du groupe Aluku, en Guyane. Le serpent est animal privilégié dans la cosmogonie des peuples Marons et Amérindiens de Guyane. Le serpent se retrouve régulièrement dans les productions artisanales et artistiques. Chez les Aluku, il est à la fois le symbole du féminin et du masculin. Plus largement dans les traditions afro-diasporique, comme dans le sèvi Ginen (vodoun ayitien), il peut être associé a des esprits ou des divinités. On retrouve aussi le symbole du serpent sur des productions matérielles du peuple Akan (Ghana).


Tags
5 months ago
REX NETTLEFORD I Love Him So Much, He Is A Caribbean Thinker Who Inspires Me Enormously.

REX NETTLEFORD I love him so much, he is a Caribbean thinker who inspires me enormously.


Tags
5 months ago

Presentation: the name of my blog comes from the term Tibonanj( Ti-Bon-Ange) which refers in the culture of Haitian vodoun to one of the two parts of the soul. Tibonanj, Ti bon ange = Good Little Angel is the part of the soul that guides us to the most just and personal way of life. It is a personalization of the higher self as an awakened part of the soul. It can also travel outside the body during sleep or trances. the Gwobonanj (Gros-Bon-Ange) = Big Good Angel, is the part of the soul that represents the vital force. It is embodied from birth. It is similar to the Àṣẹ, the divine breath, in the Yoruba civilization. It leaves the body only at the moment of death when it returns to the Gran Met, place where resides the vital force, which is perceived as a basin. Of Haitian origin, I travel and explore the world. My favorite region is the Caribbean and I dream of visiting all these islands. I am a PhD student in Cultural History and an artist/designer. My vision is that of a future Caribbean where African knowledge ( whether languages, stories, tangible and intangible production, ancient or recent )are disseminated, easily accessible and used by all. For me, All these resources allow an opening to social, human, scientific and economic inventiveness through the central point that is culture. I look forward to sharing more, all in passion and love. My aesthetic is that of Caribbean luxury, Academics vibe, Artefacts, Painting, Sculpture, Old comics and Island jazz, Funk, Reggae philosophy, Ancestral spirituality, and Green nature.


Tags
2 weeks ago
In The 1970s, Excavations At The Newton Slave Burial Ground Uncovered The Grave Of A Man Believed To

In the 1970s, excavations at the Newton Slave Burial Ground uncovered the grave of a man believed to be a healer or spiritual figure. He was buried with powerful objects: metal jewelry, an iron knife, and a short-stemmed clay pipe likely made in Ghana.

Among his burial items was a necklace made from a mix of beads, some with fascinating origins.

One glass bead, made with European powder glass, was probably crafted in Ghana.

Another, a cylindrical carnelian bead, came from Cambay, India ; a region known for carnelian bead production since the first millennium. These beads were traded through East Africa, across the Sahara, and into West Africa.

Other elements of the necklace could have been acquired in Barbados, but together they reflect a deep continuity of African cultural traditions in the Caribbean.

Scholar Jerome Handler used ethnographic sources from West Africa to interpret the necklace, and strongly argued that the man was likely seen as an obeah or healer by the enslaved community at Newton.

This burial is one of the most powerful archaeological cases for the survival of African spiritual identity through the horrors of the Middle Passage and slavery.


Tags
3 months ago
Calao, Oiseaux à Cornes, Production Du Peuple Sénoufo Présent En Côte D'Ivoire Et Mali.

Calao, oiseaux à cornes, production du peuple Sénoufo présent en Côte d'Ivoire et Mali.


Tags
5 months ago
Objets Blessés - La Réparation En Afrique, Gaetano Speranza, 2007
Objets Blessés - La Réparation En Afrique, Gaetano Speranza, 2007

Objets blessés - La réparation en Afrique, Gaetano Speranza, 2007

5 months ago
Coeur Tambour, Scholastique Mukasonga

Coeur tambour, Scholastique Mukasonga

The cover image of this book is beautiful. This luminous woman holds a bowl, bearing the colors of the moon that gives its beauty to the early morning sun, thus revealing the splendor of sacred objects. When the drum beats, the story of Africa beats. It is first the story of Queen Kitami then that of Prisca, a little girl from a village in Rwanda, whose myth resonates in the Caribbean and America. This book seems magical to me, and I’m just looking forward to reading it, it fits perfectly into my research themes.


Tags
1 month ago
 Terno Dos Reis, Henry John Drewal, January 5 1998. Madison Libraries Terno Dos Reis (Day Of The Kings)
 Terno Dos Reis, Henry John Drewal, January 5 1998. Madison Libraries Terno Dos Reis (Day Of The Kings)
 Terno Dos Reis, Henry John Drewal, January 5 1998. Madison Libraries Terno Dos Reis (Day Of The Kings)

Terno dos Reis, Henry John Drewal, January 5 1998. Madison Libraries Terno dos Reis (Day of the Kings) festivals are celebrated annually during the christmas season. The January 6th feast commemorates the arrival of the Magi in Bethlehem bearing gifts for the Christ child. Brazilian celebrations include processions in which community members dress in costumes, dance, play music, and carry banners. This Terno festival took place on January 5, 1998 in Liberdade, Salvador.


Tags
4 months ago
Unidentified Edo Artist, Carved Tusk, Benin Kingdom, Late-nineteenth Century, Ivory, 93 Cm X 7 Cm At

Unidentified Edo artist, carved tusk, Benin kingdom, late-nineteenth century, ivory, 93 cm x 7 cm at baseRoyal Ontario Museum


Tags
1 month ago
Caribbean Vernacular Architecture, Fretwork Rooted In Local Or African History And Symbolism.

Caribbean Vernacular Architecture, fretwork rooted in local or African history and symbolism.

See "Creole and vernacular architecture: embryonic syncretism in Caribbean cultural landscape", Patricia Elaine Green


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • oaluz
    oaluz liked this · 2 months ago
  • jrdsmth
    jrdsmth liked this · 2 months ago
  • artmagicly
    artmagicly liked this · 4 months ago
  • tibonanj
    tibonanj reblogged this · 4 months ago
tibonanj - Ti -Bon-Ange
Ti -Bon-Ange

My Afro-Diasporic archive for a creative and inventive Caribbean.i also started an artistic insta page @fymmartdesign

45 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags