cfiks

,

  • home
  • about us
  • research
    • Built Environment and Architecture
    • Food Systems in Ghana
    • Indigenous Performming Arts
    • Indigenous Plural Legal Systems
    • Knowledge Systems
    • Reference Work
    • Social and Cultural Systems
  • community
    • Ashanti Region
    • Brong Ahafo
    • Central Region
    • Crafts People - Wood Carving
    • Eastern Region
    • Upper East Region
    • Volta Region
    • Volta Region
    • Western Region
  • publications
    • Documents
  • gallery
  • cultural symbols
    • Arts and Crafts People - Metallurgy
    • Crafts and Arts People - Wood Carving
    • Introduction
    • Media In Which Cultural Symbols Occur
    • Metallurgy
    • Visual Metaphors and Cultural Knowledge
  • contact us
still loading....

Catalog of Various Wood Carvings of Ghana

The wood carving industry in Ghana is an indigenous craft tradition that remains vigorous in a world of rapid change. Wood carving has retained its economic and cultural importance for hundreds of years. Wood is one of the most important materials Ghanaians use in their arts to express their thoughts. Wood is used to carve various items for household use as well as for ceremonial uses. Wood carvings have symbolic, aesthetic and ceremonial values as they are linked to proverbs and other expressive genres of the various Ghanaian languages. While works by Rattray, McLeod, Sarpong, Patton and Kyeremateng have alluded to the symbolic and aesthetic values of Akan wood carving.

The rich and highly varied subject-matter of Akan art represents in different contexts virtually the entire realm of the zoological and botanical environment; domestic, religious and political scenes from Akan society; and a wealth of objects drawn from Akan material culture, both indigenous and imported. Meaning in Akan art, however, extends well beyond mere representational imagery, for most images are typically paired with verbal expressions that can be metaphorically applied to various situations in Akan life. These verbal forms include folk-tales, proverbs, praise names, jokes, riddles, boasts and insults. The famous English philosopher, Francis Bacon (1561-1626) said: "The genius, wit and spirit of a nation are discovered in its proverbs." Proverbs are used to indicate certain beliefs, attitudes, and a worldview. Although proverbs and folk-tales are the inspiration of certain visual arts elsewhere in Africa, the verbal–visual nexus of Akan arts is unique in its variety and pervasive influence.

We are compiling a catalog of a variety of wood carvings from Ghana.

Click here to visit gallery

    Youtube
    Twitter
    Facebook

LASTEST POST

loading..

Akan Chief's Umbrella Finials

Jan 25, 2016

loading..

Adinkra Symbols and Higher-order Symmetry

Jan 01, 2016

loading..

Metal Casting in Ghana

Dec 18, 2015

loading..

Towards National Identity and National Integration in Ghana

Dec 18, 2015

loading..

Adinkra Symbols and Akan Political Beliefs

Dec 18, 2015

loading..

Plantain's Nutritional and Health Benefits

Nov 18, 2015

loading..

Adinkra Cloth Symbols and Mathematics - Part 3

Nov 06, 2015

loading..

Adinkra Cloth Symbols and Mathematics - Part 2

Nov 06, 2015

loading..

Adinkra Cloth Symbols and Mathematics

Nov 06, 2015

loading..

MATHEMATICAL PATTERNS IN AFRICAN AND AFRICAN-AMERICAN HAIRSTYLES

Mar 19, 2015

loading..

Math in the Art of Braided Hairstyles

Mar 20, 2015

loading..

Fancy Coffins

Mar 18, 2015

loading..

How culture influences health beliefs

Mar 18, 2015

loading..

Herbal and Plant Medicine In Ghana

Mar 12, 2015

loading..

Food In Ghana

Mar 12, 2015

Newsletter

BACK TO TOP

©(c) 2001-2010 K. Arthur & Centre For Indigenous Knowledge Systems (CEFIKS). All rights reserved.