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Sun February 21, 2016

Utari: Ainu, Aboriginal Peoples of Japan Showcase selected from the Joseph G. Gerena Collection and Exhibited by Patrick Mestda

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The Ainu are an indigenous group of peoples from the Hokkaido region of Japan and the Sakhalin and Kuril Islands of Russia. Ethnically, they share a common ancestry with Amerindians, Tibetans and the people of Okinawa. The Utari: Ainu, Aboriginal People of Japan showcase will present selected works from the Joseph G. Gerena Collection exhibited by Patrick Mestdagh and Marjorie Levin, at The San Francisco Tribal & Textile Arts Show, February 18-21, 2016.

The Ainu showcase is curated to provide viewers with an opportunity to discover the relatively unknown aboriginal civilization of Japan. “Objects chosen from the Gerena Collection of Ainu Art demonstrate an expert and discriminating eye. In this collection we see a visual cross-over with artistic expressions from Mr. Gerena’s other great interests: Animal Style art of the great Eurasian Steppes and ancient Eskimo art of St. Lawrence Island,” states Thomas Murray, Asian & Tribal art dealer and author of the introduction to the exhibition.

Ainu art and objects are extremely rare and highly sought after by museums and collectors. More than 50 rare items will be on view in Utari: Ainu, Aboriginal People of Japan including: ikupasuy ritual prayer sticks, jewelry, weapons, textiles, and household wood pieces, as well as a grouping of historic photographs and postcards.

The word Ainu means the people. While men were known for their thick beards, Ainu women historically displayed deep blue tattoos around the mouth, a process first begun in childhood and fully completed when a girl came of age.

They dressed in robes woven from the inner bark of the elm tree. Various styles were made, but generally consisted of a robe with straight sleeves, which was folded around the body, and tied with a band about the waist.

Traditional Ainu culture was quite different from that of Japan. They lived very close to nature and survived through hunting, fishing, and some limited agriculture. Their deeply animistic belief system held that spirit forces, kamui, permeated all natural things – fire, earth, mountains, land animals, fish and plants. Bears were especially highly valued – worshiped yet also sacrificed.

The San Francisco Tribal & Textile Arts Show is the only vetted exhibition of tribal art in the United States and is considered the top tribal art event in North America. The 2016 show will feature more than 80 dealers in tribal and ethnographic arts from February 18-21, 2016 at the Fort Mason Center, Festival Pavilion.
The Ainu are an indigenous group of peoples from the Hokkaido region of Japan and the Sakhalin and Kuril Islands of Russia. Ethnically, they share a common ancestry with Amerindians, Tibetans and the people of Okinawa. The Utari: Ainu, Aboriginal People of Japan showcase will present selected works from the Joseph G. Gerena Collection exhibited by Patrick Mestdagh and Marjorie Levin, at The San Francisco Tribal & Textile Arts Show, February 18-21, 2016.

The Ainu showcase is curated to provide viewers with an opportunity to discover the relatively unknown aboriginal civilization of Japan. “Objects chosen from the Gerena Collection of Ainu Art demonstrate an expert and discriminating eye. In this collection we see a visual cross-over with artistic expressions from Mr. Gerena’s other great interests: Animal Style art of the great Eurasian Steppes and ancient Eskimo art of St. Lawrence Island,” states Thomas Murray, Asian & Tribal art dealer and author of the introduction to the exhibition.

Ainu art and objects are extremely rare and highly sought after by museums and collectors. More than 50 rare items will be on view in Utari: Ainu, Aboriginal People of Japan including: ikupasuy ritual prayer sticks, jewelry, weapons, textiles, and household wood pieces, as well as a grouping of historic photographs and postcards.

The word Ainu means the people. While men were known for their thick beards, Ainu women historically displayed deep blue tattoos around the mouth, a process first begun in childhood and fully completed when a girl came of age.

They dressed in robes woven from the inner bark of the elm tree. Various styles were made, but generally consisted of a robe with straight sleeves, which was folded around the body, and tied with a band about the waist.

Traditional Ainu culture was quite different from that of Japan. They lived very close to nature and survived through hunting, fishing, and some limited agriculture. Their deeply animistic belief system held that spirit forces, kamui, permeated all natural things – fire, earth, mountains, land animals, fish and plants. Bears were especially highly valued – worshiped yet also sacrificed.

The San Francisco Tribal & Textile Arts Show is the only vetted exhibition of tribal art in the United States and is considered the top tribal art event in North America. The 2016 show will feature more than 80 dealers in tribal and ethnographic arts from February 18-21, 2016 at the Fort Mason Center, Festival Pavilion.
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Fort Mason Center 1 Upcoming Events
Fort Mason, San Francisco, CA 94123

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