Accession No
2016.11.1
Description
Box for religious books
Place
Asia; East Asia; Mongolia; Ulaanbaatar
Period
Source
Empson, Rebecca (Professor) [field collector; Crowther-Beynon Fund [monetary donor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
2016.11.1
Cultural Affliation
Material
Wood; Pigment
Local Term
modon hairstag
Measurements
215mm x 180mm x 810mm
Events
Context (CMS Context)
(Bib) Herle, Anita, Mark Elliott and Rebecca Empson. Assembling Bodies: Art, Science & Imagination. Cambridge: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology University of Cambridge, 2009. Pg 71.
Event Date 30/3/2016
Author: Remke Velden
Context (CMS Context)
Exhibited in 'Assembling Bodies: Art, Science & Imagination' in the Andrews Gallery, MAA March 2009-November 2010.
Exhibition label text:
Household Chest
MAA Installation, 2009
Composed of items collected by Rebecca Empson 2007, Mongolia
Mobile herders in Mongolia may be separated from family members throughout the year, but people remain attached to a particular house, even after death. Household chests are a political medium for displaying and maintaining different relations attached to a single household.
Ancestral portraits, photographic montages and pieces contained inside the chest extend the agency of people and assemble family and friends, so that people are not just where their bodies are but in many different places simultaneously.
The household chest is also a site where different concepts of the body meet. The body in Mongolia is not simply composed of parts or substances. It also contains forces such as luck, might, fortune, and spirit/soul that fluctuate in and out of balance according to a person’s actions.
Many of the objects regulate and manage these forces, such as the fortune bag, religious icons, butter lamps and prayer wheels. The calendar tells of fortuitous days, according to astrology.
Female household members feed the display with daily offerings of milk libations and attend to and change its form. In so doing they tend to the people attached to a house.
Permission to reproduce the photographic montages and ancestral portraits displayed here have been sought from a household in Mongolia.
Event Date 30/3/2016
Author: Remke Velden
Context (CMS Context)
Collected by Rebecca Empson for MAA from the 'Eternal Art' Antique shop, Ulaanbaatar, on the 24th of August 2007. The box originates from Ulaanbaatar, from someone's household where they had a lama relative. 19th Century.
Event Date 30/3/2016
Author: Remke Velden
Description (CMS Description)
Red lacquered wooden box for Buddhist religious books. The red lacquer front has been decorated with curvilinear gold motifs. The back of the box is covered in black ?soot. Accompanied by lid 2016.11.2. To be placed on top of chests 2016.9 or 2016.10.
Event Date 30/3/2016
Author: Remke Velden
FM:269019
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