Fang

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The forested area that extends from Cameroon to Gabon includes Equatorial Guinea and was home to the Fang peoples whose culture thrived in the 19th century.  Fang villages and communities were organized around families and clans with common ancestors.  Indeed, the cult of ancestors was central to Fang religion, and artists made reliquary figures to guard the bones and skulls of deceased relatives.  Fang artists also carved wooden masks.  As a migratory group, the Fang continually absorbed the cultural and artistic traditions of the peoples with whom they came into contact.  European influence in the 1910s and 1920s resulted in a decline in the interest in the cult of ancestors, which was eventually replaced by Western religion, thereby causing Fang artistic production to die away.  Today this ethnic group numbers two hundred thousand.

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 301.

 NOTES  

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS (list applicable note links)

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS 

IMAGE ASSETS 

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES (digitized/non-digitized)

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
apply to objects where culture contains fang peoples

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General Description
The forested area that extends from Cameroon to Gabon includes Equatorial Guinea and was home to the Fang peoples whose culture thrived in the 19th century.  Fang villages and communities were organized around families and clans with common ancestors.  Indeed, the cult of ancestors was central to Fang religion, and artists made reliquary figures to guard the bones and skulls of deceased relatives.  Fang artists also carved wooden masks.  As a migratory group, the Fang continually absorbed the cultural and artistic traditions of the peoples with whom they came into contact.  European influence in the 1910s and 1920s resulted in a decline in the interest in the cult of ancestors, which was eventually replaced by Western religion, thereby causing Fang artistic production to die away.  Today this ethnic group numbers two hundred thousand.

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 301.

 
Fun Facts
 

Archival Resources
(digitized/non-digitized)

Web Resources
 

Notes
 

rules
Apply To
Objects
culture
Contains
fang peoples
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
@Bilal-Gore
*Arts of Africa
Gabon (nation): TGN: 1000164
Fang: AAT: 300016176
Cameroon (nation): TGN: 1000153
Equatorial Guinea (nation): TGN: 1000161
source file
peoples_and_societies-0027.xml.nores