Caravans of Gold,
Fragments in Time: Art, Culture, and Exchange across Medieval Saharan Africa
Journey to a
medieval world with Africa at its center.
Travel with the
Block Museum along routes crossing the Sahara Desert to a time when West
African gold fueled expansive trade and drove the movement of people, culture,
and religious beliefs.
Caravans of Gold is
the first major exhibition addressing the scope of Saharan trade and the shared
history of West Africa, the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe from the
eighth to sixteenth centuries. Weaving stories about interconnected histories,
the exhibition showcases the objects and ideas that connected at the crossroads
of the medieval Sahara and celebrates West Africa’s historic and
underrecognized global significance.
Caravans of Gold
draws on recent archaeological discoveries, including rare fragments from major
medieval African trading centers like Sijilmasa, Gao, and Tadmekka. These
“fragments in time” are seen alongside works of art that invite us to imagine
them as they once were. They are the starting point for a new understanding of
the medieval past and for seeing the present in a new light.
Presenting more than
250 artworks spanning five centuries and a vast geographic expanse, the
exhibition features unprecedented loans from partner institutions in Mali,
Morocco, and Nigeria, many of which will be seen in North America for the first
time.
The Block Museum
exhibition will travel to The Aga Khan Museum in Toronto (Sept. 21, 2019 – Feb.
23, 2020) and then to the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institute
(April 8 – Nov. 29, 2020)
https://www.blockmuseum.northwestern.edu/view/exhibitions/upcoming-exhibitions/caravans-of-gold,-fragments-in-time-art,-culture,-and-medieval-trans-saharan-trade.html
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