Masks: The Art of Expression John Mack (Editor)
Masks: The Art of Expression John Mack (Editor) back cover used secondhand History - General nonfiction book
Masks: The Art of Expression back cover used nonfiction second hand book

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Masks: The Art of Expression

Author: John Mack (Editor)
$30.95 3095
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Book Title
Masks: The Art of Expression
Author
John Mack (Editor)
Book Condition
GOOD - EX-LIBRARY
ISBN
9780714125305
Book Format
Softcover
Publisher
British Museum Press
Year Published
1998
Masks exert a powerful fascination. Masking is a near-universal phenomenon, but the uses and meanings of masks vary greatly between cultures. A mask may reveal or transfigure as often as it conceals. Masks covers eight principal areas: Africa, Oceania, Latin America, the Northwest coast of America, Japan, Classical Greece and Rome, Egypt and Europe. The disparate masking traditions of these cultures are discussed, but the emphasis remains on the masks themselves. They are made of every kind of material: wood, precious metals, cloth, bark, basketry, papier mache, leaves, feathers. Many are beautiful, others disturbing or even grotesque. The great variety of masks and masking traditions is clearly brought out in this wide-raning survey. With 150 colour photographs.

Masks exert a powerful fascination. Masking is a near-universal phenomenon, but the uses and meanings of masks vary greatly between cultures. A mask may reveal or transfigure as often as it conceals.

Masks covers eight principal areas: Africa, Oceania, Latin America, the Northwest coast of America, Japan, Classical Greece and Rome, Egypt and Europe. The disparate masking traditions of these cultures are discussed, but the emphasis remains on the masks themselves. They are made of every kind of material: wood, precious metals, cloth, bark, basketry, papier mache, leaves, feathers. Many are beautiful, others disturbing or even grotesque. The great variety of masks and masking traditions is clearly brought out in this wide-raning survey.

With 150 colour photographs.

Masks exert a powerful fascination. Masking is a near-universal phenomenon, but the uses and meanings of masks vary greatly between cultures. A mask may reveal or transfigure as often as it conceals.

Masks covers eight principal areas: Africa, Oceania, Latin America, the Northwest coast of America, Japan, Classical Greece and Rome, Egypt and Europe. The disparate masking traditions of these cultures are discussed, but the emphasis remains on the masks themselves. They are made of every kind of material: wood, precious metals, cloth, bark, basketry, papier mache, leaves, feathers. Many are beautiful, others disturbing or even grotesque. The great variety of masks and masking traditions is clearly brought out in this wide-raning survey.

With 150 colour photographs.