June 2017

  • Sunday, 4. June 2017 - 16:00
    CURATOR'S GUIDED TOUR
    “AND THE BEAT GOES ON...Barkcloth from the Collections of the Weltkulturen Museum”
    With Matthias Claudius Hofmann (curator of the exhibition AND THE BEAT GOES ON..., ethnologist and research assistant)
    Δ CURATORS GUIDED TOUR "AND THE BEAT GOES ON...Barkcloth from the Collections of the Weltkulturen Museum"

    “AND THE BEAT GOES ON...Barkcloth from the Collections of the Weltkulturen Museum”
    With Matthias Claudius Hofmann (curator of the exhibition AND THE BEAT GOES ON..., ethnologist and research assistant)

    Textiles made from tree bark have a long tradition in the arts around the world. In Oceania, eighteenth-century European explorers were fascinated by the large panels of barkcloth, often printed or painted with abstract patterns. But producing textiles from the inner bark of trees is also a widespread practice in parts of Africa, in South America and South-east Asia. Matthias Claudius Hofmann offers a fascinating insight into this alternative textile production technique, and outlines the significance of barkcloth in everyday life, rituals and art.

    Further information about the exhibition AND THE BEAT GOES ON... here.



    €3 / €1,50
    Costs of tour included in admission fee
    Weltkulturen Labor, Schaumainkai 37

    schließen
  • Sunday, 11. June 2017 - 15:00
    COMBINATION TOUR
    With Eva Neukirchner (Ethnologist)
    Δ COMBINATION TOUR

    With Eva Neukirchner (Ethnologist)

    „THE COMMON THREAD - The Warp and Weft of Thinking“

    Why are the principles for the first computer based on a loom? Why do so many maths teachers in Peru come from the families of weavers? What meanings lie behind the language of textile idioms? On this tour, Eva Neukirchner provides the answers to these questions, and explains the idea behind the exhibition and its development.

    Learn more about the exhibition “THE COMMON THREAD - The Warp and Weft of Thinking”

    "AND THE BEAT GOES ON...Barkcloth from the Collections of the Weltkulturen Museum"

    Textiles made from tree bark have a long tradition in the arts around the world. In Oceania, eighteenth-century European explorers were fascinated by the large panels of barkcloth, often printed or painted with abstract patterns. But producing textiles from the inner bark of trees is also a widespread practice in parts of Africa, in South America and South-east Asia. Eva Neukirchner offers a fascinating insight into this alternative textile production technique, and outlines the significance of barkcloth in everyday life, rituals and art.

    Further information about the exhibition AND THE BEAT GOES ON... here.



    €8.50 / reduced €4
    Cost of tour included in admission fee
    Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29

    schließen
  • Wednesday, 14. June 2017 - 18:00
    CONSERVATORS GUIDED TOUR
    “Simply iron?”
    With Kristina Werner (Conservator, Weltkulturen Museum)
    Δ CONSERVATORS GUIDED TOUR

    “Simply iron?”
    With Kristina Werner (conservator, Weltkulturen Museum)

    What does the work of conservators involve? What are their tasks in setting up an exhibition? And are the textiles in a museum ever ironed? Our conservator Kristina Werner provide not just the answers, but also a rather different perspective on the exhibition.

    Learn more about the exhibition “THE COMMON THREAD - The Warp and Weft of Thinking”



    €7 / reduced €3.50
    Cost of tour included in admission fee
    Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29

    schließen
  • Saturday, 17. June 2017 - 15:00
    COMBINATION TOUR
    With Eva Neukirchner (Ethnologist)
    Δ COMBINATION TOUR

    With Eva Neukirchner (Ethnologist)

    „THE COMMON THREAD - The Warp and Weft of Thinking“

    Why are the principles for the first computer based on a loom? Why do so many maths teachers in Peru come from the families of weavers? What meanings lie behind the language of textile idioms? On this tour, Eva Neukirchner provides the answers to these questions, and explains the idea behind the exhibition and its development.

    Learn more about the exhibition “THE COMMON THREAD - The Warp and Weft of Thinking”

    "AND THE BEAT GOES ON...Barkcloth from the Collections of the Weltkulturen Museum"

    Textiles made from tree bark have a long tradition in the arts around the world. In Oceania, eighteenth-century European explorers were fascinated by the large panels of barkcloth, often printed or painted with abstract patterns. But producing textiles from the inner bark of trees is also a widespread practice in parts of Africa, in South America and South-east Asia. Eva Neukirchner offers a fascinating insight into this alternative textile production technique, and outlines the significance of barkcloth in everyday life, rituals and art.

    Further information about the exhibition AND THE BEAT GOES ON... here.



    €8.50 / reduced €4
    Cost of tour included in admission fee
    Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29

    schließen
  • Wednesday, 28. June 2017 - 18:00
    THEME RELATED GUIDED TOUR
    "Weaving, crocheting, and knitting … a man’s or woman’s realm?"
    with Berit Mohr (Costume designer and cultural scholar)
    CANCELED!
    Δ THEME RELATED GUIDED TOUR

    "Weaving, crocheting, and knitting … a man’s or woman’s realm?"
    with Berit Mohr (Costume designer and cultural scholar)

    According to the cliché, working with textiles is gendered female. For many people even today, crocheting and knitting conjure up images of a ’plain Jane’ or ’proper little hausfrau’. So is working with textiles also a site of a constant ‘gender war’? Looking at the world without Eurocentric glasses, it soon becomes clear just how untenable such stereotypes are.
    This tour offers a deeper insight into the links between textile production processes, identity and gender roles.

    Learn more about the exhibition “THE COMMON THREAD - The warp and weft of thinking”



    €7 / reduced €3.50
    Cost of tour included in admission fee
    Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29
    CANCELED!

    schließen