Национальный ювелирный музей (Марокко)
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Национальный музей ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных ювелирных изделий , во Французском Музее Национальном де -ла -Пауре , Марокко, является этнографическим музеем, расположенным в бывшем музее в столице страны Рабата . Наряду с Касбами Удайс , здания музея и вдохновленные андалузскими садами являются частью мест всемирного наследия ЮНЕСКО в Рабате. [ 1 ] Открытый для публики в январе 2023 года, музей привлек 40 000 посетителей в течение первой недели.
Фон
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Павильон Мулай Исмаил
[ редактировать ]Южная часть Касба Удаи, одного из старейших исторических районов Рабата, включает в себя бывшую павильон или дворцовую резиденцию, построенную султаном Мулай Исмаил (управляется 1672–1727) в конце 17 -го века. Здание сосредоточено вокруг основного двора в стиле марокканского риада и отличается снаружи башней. В 1915 году во время французского протектората над Марокко здание было преобразовано в музей по инициативе Просперского Рикарда, директора службы Arts Indigènes под руководством генерального жителя Хьюберта Льятеи . Он стал этнографическим музеем с коллекцией, изначально составленной из пожертвований от самого Просперского Рикарда, востоковедного Альфреда Бел и этнографа Жана Бесанкенота . Музейная коллекция расширилась, чтобы включить марокканские ювелирные изделия, музыкальные инструменты, керамику, коры и рукописи (некоторые столь же старые, как 12 -й век), костюмы, шелк и ковры из разных регионов страны. [ 2 ]
В 2023 году, после тщательного восстановления, он стал Национальным ювелирным музеем, посвященным истории марокканских украшений , наряду с другими объектами традиционной личной одежды. [ 3 ] Новый музей был официально открыт 7 января 2023 года марокканской принцессой Лаллой Хасна , Мехди Котби, художником и президентом Национального фонда музеев (FNM) и представителями Министерства культуры, а также других организаций. В течение первой недели после открытия для публики он привлек 40 000 посетителей. [ 4 ] [ 5 ]
Along with other public museums for archaeology, ethnography or visual arts in Morocco, it is administered by the National Foundation of Museums.[6] The scenography of the National Jewellery Museum was created by Christophe Martin, who had designed a similar exhibition for the Yves Saint Laurent Museum in Marrakesh.[7][8][9]
Collections
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Through its collections, the National Jewellery Museum aims to represent the history and geography of Morocco, including the cultural specificities of each region and the workshops for the production of the pieces. The exhibition is divided into five sections, presenting the evolution of jewellery during the history of Morocco, bridal costumes and other female and male adornments, rural Amazigh jewellery and the regional styles of urban jewellery and clothing.[5]
Starting with the oldest known pieces of artefacts made by hominin precursors of modern humans, dated to about 142,000 years, the museum presents a reproduction of perforated shell beads.[10] They were found in 2019 by archaeologists in the Bizmoune cave near Essaouira, Morocco, and show perforations indicating purposeful processing that may have been a token of identity.[11][12] Further historical periods covered are the pre-historic, pre-Roman (Phoenician and Carthaginian), Roman and Islamic eras, leading up to the early 20th century. The collection comprises around 8,000 items, including historical caftans and urban bridal adornments typical of different cities. A special section of the museum presents hundreds of pieces donated by King Mohammed VI from the royal collection of Amazigh (Berber) jewellery, including a large variety of silver fibula brooches and palm-shaped khmissa amulets.[10][13]
In addition to its permanent exhibition, the museum has announced a dozen temporary exhibitions per year as part of its mission to promote contemporary and international designs of jewellery or personal attire.[3][13]
Research on Moroccan jewellery
[edit]In his 1953 ethnographic work Bijoux arabes et berbères du Maroc (Arab and Berber jewellery of Morocco), French ethnographer Jean Besancenot published his drawings and descriptions of almost 200 different pieces of Arab urban and Berber rural jewellery from various regions and traditions in Morocco.[14] In the introduction, he commented on the origins, social use and meaning of jewellery for the different communities, as well as on the changing tastes of the customers during the first half of the 20th century. Referring to the respective clients and their tastes, he stated the general rule: Urban jewellery was usually made of gold, precious stones and other adornments, while pieces for rural Berber clients were almost exclusively made of silver. In both groups existed local variations in usage, shape and other elements. As jewellery forms an important part of a woman's dowry in the Maghreb, he further observed:
The adornment of the bride during the week of the wedding is composed of such a quantity of jewellery that only very rich families could offer it to the bride. For the less wealthy families, the negagefs [sic], women specialized in this kind of trade, rented their services for the duration of the wedding ceremonies, along with sumptuous clothes and especially the enormous quantity of jewels deemed essential for the bride to appear with honour and adorned like an idol before her friends, assembled in admiring curiosity.
— Jean Besancenot, Bijoux arabes et berbères du Maroc [15]
Since Besancenot's seminal work[16] about costumes and jewellery in Morocco, further studies and exhibition catalogues discussing the different types and their regional origins have been published mainly in France, including Rabaté (1999 and 2015). Scholars in the United States, such as Becker (2014) and Nicholas (2014), have added studies on the social use and anthropological interpretation of such personal adornments in Morocco.
Gallery
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Bride from Tetouan
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Bride from Rabat
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Bride from Fes
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Bride from Guelmim
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Berber jewellery, silver and coral
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Berber jewellery, silver and amber
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Khmissa amulets
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Caftan from Oujda
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Rabat, Modern Capital and Historic City: a Shared Heritage". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
- ^ "MWNF - Museum With No Frontiers". www.museumwnf.org. Archived from the original on 24 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Bennani, Ouafaa (12 January 2023). "A la découverte du Musée national de la parure". lematin.ma (in French). Archived from the original on 21 June 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
- ^ "Musée national de la parure : 40.000 visiteurs en une semaine". Telquel.ma (in French). Archived from the original on 21 June 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Le Musée National de la Parure ouvre ses portes à Rabat". aemagazine (in French). 27 January 2023. Archived from the original on 21 June 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
- ^ "Oudayas, musée National de la Parure". Fondation Nationale des Musées (in French). Archived from the original on 5 June 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
- ^ "Un nouveau musée ouvre à Rabat". Diptyk Magazine (in French). 10 January 2023. Archived from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
- ^ "Le musée de la parure aux Oudayas, enrichi d'un dépôt royal, ouvre ses portes le 2 décembre". Le 360 Français (in French). Archived from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
- ^ "The Musée Pierre Bergé des Arts Berbères– Jardin Majorelle". www.jardinmajorelle.com. Archived from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
- ^ Jump up to: a b AfricaNews (29 January 2023). "Morocco's National Finery Museum reopens after massive refurbish". Africanews. Archived from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
- ^ Sehasseh, El Mehdi; Fernandez, Philippe; Kuhn, Steven; Stiner, Mary; Mentzer, Susan; Colarossi, Debra; Clark, Amy; Lanoe, François; Pailes, Matthew; Hoffmann, Dirk; Benson, Alexa; Rhodes, Edward; Benmansour, Moncef; Laissaoui, Abdelmoughit; Ziani, Ismail (24 September 2021). "Early Middle Stone Age personal ornaments from Bizmoune Cave, Essaouira, Morocco". Science Advances. 7 (39): eabi8620. Bibcode:2021SciA....7.8620S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.abi8620. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 8457661. PMID 34550742.
- ^ Gibbons, Ann (22 September 2021). "World's oldest known beads found in Morocco". www.science.org. doi:10.1126/science.acx9173. S2CID 239191220. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Firdaous, Kawtar (12 January 2023). "Rabat. Le musée national de la parure rouvre ses portes". LobservateurDuMaroc (in French). Archived from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
- ^ Rabaté, Marie-Rose; Goldenberg, André; Thau, Jean-Louis (1999). Bijoux du Maroc du Haut Atlas à la Méditerranée, depuis le temps des juifs jusqu'à la fin du XXe siècle (in French). Eddif. pp. 37, 64, 109. ISBN 978-2-7449-0081-5. Archived from the original on 13 July 2023. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
- ^ Besancenot, Jean (2001) [1953]. Bijoux arabes et berbères du Maroc: 40 planches comprenant 193 modèles de bijoux, dessinés et commentés. Casablanca: Editions de la Cigogne. p. X. ISBN 978-9954-0-2672-4.
- ^ Nicholas (2014, p. 402) stated that references to his scholarly and artistic work have been "taken up by academics, curators, Moroccan fashion designers, commercial institutions, and Moroccan artists", and they "influence the social imaginary, both Moroccan and foreign, in so far as it constitutes a visual vocabulary of traditional Moroccan garments and how they were worn".
Further reading
[edit]- Besancenot, Jean (1988) [1942]. Costumes et types du Maroc illustrés de soixante gouaches reproduites en facsimile et en camaïeu. Paris: Horizons de France. ISBN 978-2-85744-357-5.
- Besancenot, Jean (2001) [1953]. Bijoux arabes et berbères du Maroc: 40 planches comprenant 193 modèles de bijoux, dessinés et commentés. Casablanca: Editions de la Cigogne. ISBN 978-9954-0-2672-4.
- Grammet, Ivo (1998). "Les Bijoux". In Grammet, Ivo; de Meersman, Min (eds.). Splendeurs du Maroc. Tervuren: Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale. pp. 212–339. ISBN 90-75894-14-7.
- Rabaté, Marie-Rose; Goldenberg, André; Thau, Jean-Louis (1999). Bijoux du Maroc du Haut Atlas à la Méditerranée, depuis le temps des juifs jusqu'à la fin du XXe siècle. Aix-en-Provence: Edisud/Eddif. ISBN 978-2-7449-0081-5.
- Becker, Cynthia (2014). "Jewelry art. Masterpieces of Berber identity". In Dahlström, Björn (ed.). Berber women of Morocco. Paris: Éditions Artlys. pp. 43–75. ISBN 978-2-85495-576-7. OCLC 902727356.
- Николас, Клэр (2014). «Тексты и текстиля ...: колониальная этнография и современное марокканское материальное наследие» . Журнал североафриканских исследований . 19 (3): 390–412. doi : 10.1080/13629387.2014.897621 . S2CID 144224109 .
- Рабате, Мари-Роуз (2015). Ювелирные изделия Марокко: от Хаут-Атласа до долины Драа (по-французски). ПАРИС-ЛА ДЕФЕНСЕ: ACR EDITION. ISBN 978-2-86770-210-5 Полем OCLC 932463823 .