ÜCRETSİZ SANAT DANIŞMANLIĞI

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ejagham people

ejagham people

Works span 1900–1900

Ejagham People: Masks and Tradition The Ejagham people, also known as Ekoi, inhabit southeastern Nigeria and southwestern Cameroon, primarily along the Cross River basin. Their artistic heritage is particularly distinguished by elaborate mask traditions—crests—that serve as central elements of ceremonial rituals and social cohesion. These masks are not merely decorative objects; they embody complex symbolic representations of ancestor…

1
dated works
1
chapters
1900
first work
1900
last work
Chronological Journey

The Lifeline

Scroll through ejagham people's working life — artwork by artwork, chapter by chapter — from the earliest dated work to the last. Each thumbnail is pinned at its exact year on the gold axis.

Drag or scroll to travel through time

Chapters — Career Periods

The ribbon is divided into shaded bands, one per career chapter. Each chapter groups ejagham people's works by their historical period — early training, mature practice, final years.

Thumbnails — Dated Works

Every thumbnail is pinned at its precise creation year. A thin gold thread drops from the image to its exact point on the axis. Larger frames mark the artist's masterpieces by rank.

Colour Band — Movement Drift

The gradient bar beneath the axis shifts colour as the dominant art movement changes over time — from the warm golds of the early period through the deeper tones of maturity. It fills progressively as you scroll.