Banda Cultural Centre painting of spinning and strip-woven cloth, 2016
Public DepositedIn June 2011, Banda Research Project team member Amanda Logan collaborated with local artist Kwame K.B. 2 to develop paintings for the Banda Cultural Centre's courtyard doors. The paintings illustrate crafts practiced in the area for which we have archaeological evidence. This image shows a woman spinning cotton thread (right) and a man wearing a locally made blue-and-white strip-woven cloth (left). Archaeologists find spindle whorls used to make thread on late 18th-and early 19th-century archaeological sites. This shows that households produced their own cloth during recent centuries. Before the 17th century, cotton cloth seems to have been less common and was probably acquired through trade from market centers. Banda Cultural Centre, Ahenkro, June, 2016.
- 8.165961, -2.354312
- Dr. Ann B. Stahl
- Digital image
- 2016
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ABS_2016-06-15_Ahenkro_BandaCulturalCentre_Painting_03_4864.JPG | 2019-05-05 | Public |
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