Showing posts with label my land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my land. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

SanKoFa


I can't remember how often I heard or used this word "SanKoFa". It is just one among others in my native language but I always liked the rhythm of the sound when Grandma used it. 
Then I googled it and wow... I learned a lot about it. How it has become a symbol in traditional Akan Art, in African American and African Diaspora.
SanKoFa mean to reach back and get it.


It comes to this moment in my life that I need to return to my roots!

When I first started my jewelry journey I wanted to make plenty of tribal jewelry, but with a comtempory influence.
I made some of them which were sold very quickly to people like me, who like the jewelry they wear to be noticed. ( In my case, it was not the sole purpose but I feel more comfortable this way!)
Then, we moved to this city where I currently live and I lost my interest in making tribal necklaces.  I was selling more earrings than my tribal necklaces.
Recently however, I felt the huge need to make the necklaces again and the inspiration came to me naturally.


Africa, Africa, Africa...
My beautiful land,

Land of proud warrior,

in our ancestral Savannah.

Don't tell me you are a myth,

because that's the way, I see you.

Beautiful land,
You have so much to give,
So much to forgive,


Africa, my land, Africa the broken heart. I see and feel your pain, but through this pain still I see your beautiful smile. I hear your Heart of a broken land crying. This is my Land and I won't deny it because I love you more than ever before... Africa


I see your hidden beauty, I see you like a very timid beautiful woman.
I see your potential and I love you ever more.
My land, My broken land,
I love you more than ever before,
Forgive us, Africa!
Forgive your children,
Because they didn't teach us, how to show you this love!
I love you more than ever before!


I never really left you Africa, because I carry you in my heart wherever I go!


You made me the strong woman, I am today!
I am so thankful for that!


I know like everywhere else in the world, you are changing. You are making a transition in your own style. Unfortunately these changes are not for the best!
We are losing our culture.
We are losing our native languages.
but still
Africa, I love you evermore


Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika
God Bless Africa

In this project, I used handmade vintage recycled vinyl beads from Mali, vintage Bauxite, African trade beads given to me by my Grandma,Yoruba Bell spiral charms, brass from Nigeria, brass cast metal from Ivory Coast, recycled krobo beads I bought in Ghana during my last trip there. The pendant mask was specially made for me at my request a few years ago by a Senegalese Artisan in the Ivory Coast, using the technique of lost wax,
and of course: gemstones, bone, handmade ceramics and polymer clay beads  made by my friend Leah Curtis.
I also, repurposed a Tibetan necklace my sister gave me which her friend bought in Nepal a very long time ago!

What you may think is just a long string of beads, is in fact a lot of: work, research, assemblage and disassembling to make the most perfectly imperfect tribal necklace from recycled objects that I have collected from all over the world over a period of several years.


As always thank you so much / Me daa si  :)



Thursday, May 7, 2015

A tribute to my Land, Africa!



                                                         To get lost is to learn the way. ~ African proverb


I heard the call of these beads like an echo in the starry, peaceful, dark night of Sahara to serve as physical reminder for someone to relate their spirit as strong medecine of our mother Earth and people who live in it.
Very long exotic, with a tribal vibe, bohemian flare necklace is  composed of fourteen different materials and can be worn simple or double.

                                                                  On The Road To FouTa DjaLon






       BaLaDe A Tombouctou, Timbuktu

The color of this stone remind me of the sand dunes.

 Tribal style vibe with bohomian flare earrings composed of gold, earthy Brown Cacoxenite Quartz, dancing at the bottoms are Old Telsum metal Ethiopian drops and handmade pure copper rustic ball end twist charms.

Cacoxenite is one of those rare ingredients that make something good even better
Cacoxenite forms within crystal or amethyst as an inclusion. It is a rather rare occurance, and can create a visually spectacular stone.
Its presence expands the properties already emanating from the host stone, and adds its own remarkable dimension of spiritual evolution and connection.

Cacoxenite is also a major mineral in the Super Seven crystal, also known as Melody Stone or Sacred Seven





Known as a Stone of Ascension, Cacoxenite is believed to raise the spiritual awareness of the human race and to provide a loving and ethereal connection between all of the universe.  Its vibration assists in aligning the Third Chakra with the spiritual.
Source:  Crystal vaults.com


                     Wisdom is like a baobab tree; no one individual can embrace it. ~ Akan proverb



  Tombouctou is a city in the western  of Mali, historically important as a trading post on the trans-Saharan caravan route and as a centre of Islamic culture (c. 1400–1600). It is located on the southern edge of the Sahara, about 8 miles (13 km) north of the Niger River. The city was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1988.