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Former name | Museu de Etnologia do Ultramar (Overseas Ethnology Museum) |
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Established | 1976 |
Location | Restelo, Lisbon, Portugal |
Coordinates | 38°42′17″N9°12′31″W / 38.7048°N 9.2085°W |
Type | Ethnographic Museum |
Visitors | 5,217 (2022) [1] |
Website | https://museudeetnologia.pt |
The National Museum of Ethnology (Portuguese : Museu Nacional de Etnologia) is an ethnographic museum in Lisbon, Portugal. The museum holds the most important ethnographic collections in the country. It is responsible for research, safeguarding and management of more than 40.000 objects from Africa, Asia and South America, as well as of a separate collection of Portuguese folk art and other forms of the country's ethnographic heritage.
The museum's ethnographic collections are divided into two separate departments. There is the collection assembled for the earlier Museu de Etnologia do Ultramar (Overseas Ethnology Museum), started in 1965 by Jorge Dias and his team, who introduced the field of social anthropology to Portugal. These collections, totaling about 42,000 objects, represent 80 countries and 5 continents, with greater emphasis on cultures from Africa, Asia and South America as well as on traditional Portuguese culture. Many of these collections were documented through field research. Further, the museum holds important archives of photographs, films, recording and other media. [2]
The second department of the museum consists of 11,600 objects from the Popular Art Museum. This collection was largely assembled in the 1930s and early 1940s for exhibitions promoted by the military dictatorship (1926-1933) and the regime of the Estado Novo (1933-1974). [3] This department presents Portuguese folk art and traditions. [4]
The present museum's building was opened in 1976 and extended in 2000. [5] Following the transfer of the collections of the former Museum of Popular Art to the building of the National Museum of Ethnology, both museums were merged into a single museum and became the National Museum of Ethnology / Popular Art Museum. [6] For this, the new Galleries of Rural Life were added, and in 2006, the Amazonia Galleries were inaugurated. [7]
In 2025, the permanent exhibition, titled The Museum, many Things, features objects and their cultural background from Portugal, Indonesia, Angola and Mali. These include the Bali nese shadow theatre Wayang Kulit, [8] puppet figurines from south-western Angola, [9] puppets and masks from Mali, [10] sculptures and musical instruments from different folk music traditions in Portugal. [11]
With this series of objects and elements of the museum's history, the exhibition commemorates some of the ethnologists who contributed to the collections and early stages of the museum. These include Jorge Dias, Margot Dias, Fernando Galhano, Ernesto Veiga de Oliveira and Benjamim Pereira, who were part of a group of researchers in the Centre for Ethnological Studies from the late 1940s onwards. [12] [2]
Among its temporary shows, the museum has been presenting the exhibition "Deconstructing Colonialism, Decolonising the Imaginary" focusing on Portuguese colonialism in Africa from 30 October 2024 to 02 November 2025. This is part of the museum’s aims to investigate "the provenance of its extra-European collections and to reflect on the colonial context in which the museum was founded and its first collections were gathered." [13] [14]
In 2000, the National Museum of Ethnology cooperated with the Museum of Modern Art in New York City for a travelling exhibition showing African art from its collection. [15]
The National Museum of Brazil is the oldest scientific institution of Brazil. It is located in the city of Rio de Janeiro, where it is installed in the Paço de São Cristóvão, which is inside the Quinta da Boa Vista. The main building was originally the residence of the House of Braganza in colonial Brazil, as the Portuguese royal family between 1808 and 1821 and then as the Brazilian imperial family between 1822 and 1889. After the monarchy was deposed, it hosted the Republican Constituent Assembly from 1889 to 1891 before being assigned to the use of the museum in 1892. The building was listed as Brazilian National Heritage in 1938 and was largely destroyed by a fire in 2018.
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The Museu Nacional de Belas Artes is a national art museum located in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The museum, officially established in 1937 by the initiative of education minister Gustavo Capanema, was inaugurated in 1938 by President Getúlio Vargas. The museum collection, on the other hand, takes its rise in the transfer of the Portuguese Court to Brazil in the early 19th century, when King John VI brought along with him part of the Portuguese Royal Collection. This art collection stayed in Brazil after the King's return to Europe and became the core collection of the National School of Fine Arts. When the museum was created in 1937, it became the heir not only the National School collection, but also of its headquarters, a 1908 eclectic style building projected by Spanish architect Adolfo Morales de los Ríos.
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Some African objects had been collected by Europeans for centuries, and there had been industries producing some types, especially carvings in ivory, for European markets in some coastal regions. Between 1890 and 1918 the volume of objects greatly increased as Western colonial expansion in Africa led to the removal of many pieces of sub-Saharan African art that were subsequently brought to Europe and displayed. These objects entered the collections of natural history museums, art museums and private collections in Europe and the United States. About 90% of Africa's cultural heritage is believed to be located in Europe, according to French art historians.
Museu Afro Brasil is a history, artistic and ethnographic museum dedicated to the research, preservation, and exhibition of objects and works related to the cultural sphere of black people in Brazil. It is a public institution held by the Secretariat for Culture of the São Paulo State and managed by the Museu Afro Brasil Association. The museum is located in Ibirapuera Park, a major urban park in São Paulo. The Manoel da Nóbrega Pavilion, designed by Oscar Niemeyer in 1959, houses the Museum. It holds around 6 thousands items and pieces including paintings, sculptures, photos, documents, and archives created between the 15th Century and the present day. The aggregation of pieces includes many works of the African and Afro-Brazilian cultural spheres, ranging from subjects and topics such as religion, labor, and art to the African Diaspora and slavery, whilst registering and affirming the historical trajectory and the African influences in the construction of the Brazilian society. The Museum also offers a diverse range of cultural and didactic activities, temporary expositions, and contains a theater and a specialized library.
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