Guna Art Book

$50.00

Kuna Art Guna Art – The Remarkable Creations of a Central American Indigenous Culture

 

Guna Art is a stunningly beautiful book…an enduring resource for anyone seeking to understand the power of a culture deeply rooted in natural wisdom.” – Jane Goodall, Ph.D.

This beautiful book is a tribute to one of the most remarkable artistic expressions of the Americas.” – Anthropologist Wade Davis, Ph.D.

 

Hidden for more than forty years in a Florida storage unit, one of the world’s largest collections of early Kuna (Guna) art – over 2,500 mola textiles, nuchu figures, staffs, and drawings – was discoveed following the passing of collector Kit Kapp.Kuna Art Guna Art brings this archive to light.

 

Featuring over 300 never-before-published examples from the collections of Kit Kapp and Tom Hannaher, the book’s high-resolution images reveal the creativity and worldview of the Guna people of Panama.

 

Co-authored by Tom Hannaher with 48 Guna knowledge-keepers, the volume includes essays by Guna anthropologist Cebaldo Inawinapi and historian Briseida Iglesias.

 

This groundbreaking publication offers an authoritative, community-supported window into one of the most vibrant art traditions of the Americas. The net proceeds from the sale of the book support the repatriation of indigenous art to Panama by Geoversity Foundation.

 

US and Canada

Purchase through Amazon: https://a.co/d/fW0SfCH.

 

Republic of Panama ($6 per delivery or free pickup).

Click “Donate” to purchase the book in Panama.

Pickup location in Panama: Ciudad del Saber, Clayton, Calle Henry, Casa 389A. Phone number: 832-5800.

10% discount on purchases of 10+ books in Panama. Copy and use this coupon on the following page: GUNA10

 

$50.00

Category:

Description

 

Nudsus carved in a minimalist Mu Sekob style. Kapp.
Abstract men or floral mola. Kapp.
The first known photograph of Guna women wearing mola blouses. 1887. Dr. F. B. Van Tuebler.
Mu Sekob style nudsu with bird-like face.
Very large mola dated to 1920s.
Big hats & Military carvings
Drawing of “Ibe Saila Galu” (home of evil spirits), by Alfonso Dias Granada.
Photo ©1973 Ann Parker.
Buddarar (sea urchin) mola, Kapp.

Additional information

Weight 1.64 kg
Dimensions 28.58 × 22.23 × 2.03 cm