Second Skin: Everyday and Sacred Uses of Bark Worldwide
Introduction
This website is a companion to the Royal Albert Memorial Museum's 'Second Skin' exhibition, the main purpose of which is to demonstrate the many uses of bark and to show the amazing range of barkcloth designs which have been produced in the last 250 years by artists both known and unknown.
The museum has a collection of about 160 examples of barkcloth from many parts of the world, of which, only a small number are displayed in the World Cultures galleries at any one time.
These cloths combine the exotic and the familiar. The uses to which this kind of cloth have been put may be obvious - costume, matting, house decoration. The designs are vibrant and immediately attractive, yet the material itself is unfamiliar.
This exhibition is not intended to be a comprehensive account of the uses of bark or the myriad forms of barkcloth, but to spark the interest of visitors in a little-known material.
Next: What is bark?
Sub pages
What is bark
Barkcloth Printing
Bark as cloth
Bark clothing
Barkcloth in Africa
Barkcloth in the Americas
Barkcloth in the Pacific
Bark as a raw material
Bark made into fibres
Bark as sheet and cork
Barkcloth in the Pacific
Pacific: Fiji
Pacific: Hawaiian
Pacific: Marquesas Islands and Cook Islands
Pacific: Melanesia
Pacific: Samoa and Uvea
Pacific: Society Islands and Pitcairn
Pacific: Tonga

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