Great review Ingo and I really enjoy your examination of the tribal arts world we live in and spend in. Please do a deep dive into the Civilization show coming up. This looks like it may be something special.
I enjoyed your market analysis. Let's hope more clients will visit the galleries indeed, they are those who are able to edicate their clents, but if people only buy at auctions the war is over.
@@andersandersen6295 Unfortunately, I know very little about it. There is still the Tribal Art magazine channel and the collector Julian Leen and a few others, but they haven't uploaded anything for a long time.
@@about-africa3459 Thank you Ingo, there may still be something interresting in their old videos for me to learn. im relativly new to collecting and are trying to learn what to look for in authentic tribal art. some i can identify as obvious made for tourist, but others that i deem to be good are judged to be artificially aged, im trying to make sense of the jungle 🙂
@ sorry, just read Headhunters of Papua. All contacts between the French expedition leaders and the Papuan tribes were characterized by exchanges of food, mirrors and the like. I still wonder if the tribal artists get their fare share of the value of their art work. Could you elaborate on that one. Thanks.
@@hermanparisius2828 In Africa, the 'authentic works' traded at high prices today were commissioned works for tribal societies, families, etc. I don't know what the artists got for them back then. These were then sold by the new owners, given as gifts, exchanged or even plundered or given to missionaries. The objects were exchanged for beads or tools, for example. The beads had a high value in African societies and enhanced the prestige of the owner, for example. Or the beads could be exchanged for cattle... The objects then became really expensive in the West when museums or collectors wanted to acquire them.
many thanks for your smart report.
👍👍👍
Great review Ingo and I really enjoy your examination of the tribal arts world we live in and spend in. Please do a deep dive into the Civilization show coming up. This looks like it may be something special.
Thanks four yours videos. Merci
I enjoyed your market analysis. Let's hope more clients will visit the galleries indeed, they are those who are able to edicate their clents, but if people only buy at auctions the war is over.
@@DavidNorden You are 100% right.
Thank you very much. can you reccomend other youtube channels that works with this subject?
@@andersandersen6295 Unfortunately, I know very little about it. There is still the Tribal Art magazine channel and the collector Julian Leen and a few others, but they haven't uploaded anything for a long time.
@@about-africa3459 Thank you Ingo, there may still be something interresting in their old videos for me to learn.
im relativly new to collecting and are trying to learn what to look for in authentic tribal art.
some i can identify as obvious made for tourist, but others that i deem to be good are judged to be artificially aged, im trying to make sense of the jungle 🙂
Wish the artists got some of that money too. Probably a few bananas and a mirror.
@@hermanparisius2828 Sorry. But the bananas and the mirror thing sounds almost racist.
@ sorry, just read Headhunters of Papua. All contacts between the French expedition leaders and the Papuan tribes were characterized by exchanges of food, mirrors and the like. I still wonder if the tribal artists get their fare share of the value of their art work. Could you elaborate on that one. Thanks.
@@hermanparisius2828 In Africa, the 'authentic works' traded at high prices today were commissioned works for tribal societies, families, etc. I don't know what the artists got for them back then. These were then sold by the new owners, given as gifts, exchanged or even plundered or given to missionaries. The objects were exchanged for beads or tools, for example. The beads had a high value in African societies and enhanced the prestige of the owner, for example. Or the beads could be exchanged for cattle... The objects then became really expensive in the West when museums or collectors wanted to acquire them.
These sales results make me dizzy.......
Mostly faked... Forget.