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Art History Virtual Exhibition

African Mud Cloth: Researched and Conserved by Wendi Pyle-Fields

August, 2020 by Sarah Teel

Bògòlan, also known as bokolanfini, is a type of decorated cloth made by the Bamana peoples of Mali, in Western Africa.  Traditional bògòlan is made by women artisans who spin and weave locally grown cotton to make long strips of cloth that are about five inches wide, and then sew the strips together into large panels. These panels are then dyed with local iron-rich mud … [Read more...] about African Mud Cloth: Researched and Conserved by Wendi Pyle-Fields

Filed Under: 2017 Fall, ART/MST 488: Basic Conservation of Art and Artifacts Tagged With: africa, african art, bamana culture, bogolan, bogolan african mud cloth, female circumcision, mud cloth

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