Yoruba Art Gallery
atlas fam
2015 fashion
celebrity costumes
41booksin2016
daegwallyeong
Forward Thinking: 3D Printing is a new class in which children are using fabrication tools to both l
Scholars are still debating this! Some believe they are scarification marks, other scholars speculat
African Atlantis and the Wonders of the Ife SculpturesAround the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
Iemanjá, Yemoja, Yemaya,sculpture by Abayomi Barber (1971). National Gallery of Art, Nigeria.
David Hammons. Untitled (Orange Is The New Black), 2015.
Yemonja/Yemanja and Ibeji, Yoruba art
Yoruba mask used in the Gelede festival. Now in the Glenbow Museum, Calgary.
Egungun mask of the Yoruba people, Nigeria. Artist unknown; 20th century. Now in theMusée du quai
Yoruba-style helmet (copper alloy) depicting two birds of prey attacking a horse-headed snake. From
Yoruba twin statuettes covered with shells. Artist unknown; 20th century. Now in theMusée du quai
Hey Everyone! Check out the sneak peak for Chapter 2 of Itan: Part one! A graphic novel rooted in tr
Ivory armband from the Yoruba city-state of Owo (in present-day Ondo State, Nigeria). Artist unknow
We’re honoring Pride Month with a look at LGBTQ+ artists who use languages of craft, textile, handiw
Oduduwaby Ayo AdelagunArtist commentary: “Oduduwa,was the 1st Ooni, King of Ile-Ife with the titles
Ivory bracelet,Nigeria, Yoruba, 18th century
artmindbodysoul:Olokun Yoruba // ★The Sea Goddess of Nigeria★
E kaaro! Welcome! There is power and meaning in language. There is power and a sense of welcoming in
slam-african:Divination Tapper (iroke Ifá), Unidentified Yoruba artist, mid-19th to early 20th centu
Magbo mask (wood, textiles, metal, and sequins) of the Yoruba people, Nigeria. Artist unknown; 19th
Hunter or shaman’s talismanYoruba people, Nigeria, West Africa, Cotton, leather, shells, organ
Double Take: African Innovations opens today! Double Take is a new, temporary installation that buil
Figure of a female devotee of the Yoruba thunder deity Shango, holding the god’s characteristic symb
The egúngún masquerade tradition, practiced by the Yorùbá people of West Africa and their diasporic
OGUN by Ahab Aguiar
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