Plastic hair comb, 21st century, bought in Nigeria

探花直播6,000-year history of the Afro Comb, its extraordinary impact on cultures听worldwide, and community stories relating to hair today are being explored in a听new exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum and the Museum of Archaeology &听Anthropology in Cambridge.

This exhibition expresses the unity of archaeology and anthropology, where art meets personal human stories, observing patterns of change and continuity of this vital cultural tradition.

Sally-Ann Ashton

Origins of the Afro Comb follows the evolution of the comb from pre-dynastic听Egypt to modern-day, tracing the similarities in form and the remarkablediversity of designs found across Africa and the African Diaspora. 探花直播exhibitionis a part of a legacy project to record how the comb is used today, with visitorsbeing encouraged to contribute their personal stories and hairstyles both to theexhibition and to archives for future generations.

Each of the hundreds of beautiful combs on display is a work of art, from pieces exquisitely carved in wood with tiny geometric designs, to works sculpted from听ivory or inlayed with multi-coloured glass beads. 探花直播displays will include听images and sculpture showing a wide variety of hairstyles illustrating how the听combs have been used since antiquity.

A digital interaction gallery will show projections of personal stories about听combs and African type hair, as well as the contribution personal styling has听had to play in maintaining and expressing cultural identity. At the Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, the story is brought into the present with three connected contemporary art installations My Hair: Black Hair Culture, Style and Politics by artist and writer Michael McMillan. 探花直播installations show the development of the global black hair industry, the politicising and popularisation of Afros and Dreadlocks, and bring to life the 鈥楥ottage Salon鈥 in the Home, 探花直播Barber Shop and 探花直播Hairdressing Salon.

Explaining black hair culture, styling and politics as we know it today, the听installations are complemented by a film showing different hands styling hair,听and a series of soundbites, which can be heard by sitting under one of the听hairdryers.

Origins of the Afro Comb has been curated by Sally-Ann Ashton, Senior听Assistant Keeper of Antiquities at the Fitzwilliam Museum: 鈥淭his exhibition听expresses the unity of archaeology and anthropology, where art meets personal听human stories, observing patterns of change and continuity of this vital cultural听tradition.

鈥淢uch of the work here has involved a very lively community of people today, working with a diverse committee contributing both advice and听pieces for the displays, including artworks and personal combs. These personal听items add depth to the story we are telling here, complementing the truly听remarkable artworks we have on display from the Cambridge 探花直播听Museums collections, from the British Museum, the Petrie Museum, the听National Commission for Museums and Monuments in Nigeria and other individual contributors.鈥

Four major strands of Ashton鈥檚 own research are reflected in this exhibition:听museum curatorship, Egyptology, anthropological fieldwork in Jamaica, and听leadership of an innovative long-term prisons project across England, teaching听black history 鈥 and at the same time studying the impact of imprisonment on听hair.

Contributions from the widening public about their hair stories are being听welcomed throughout the exhibition and beyond at the website听

Ashton said: 鈥淩egardless of where you are and whether you visit the听exhibition, we would love to hear from anybody who uses the combs today,听who thinks about hair styles and what they might mean in general, or who听might just be interested in cultural history at a global scale.

鈥淥ne of the most important displays in the exhibition is a case of combs with听lost histories. They have no story because it was never recorded at the time;听now we have no way of knowing. With enough contributions from the public听we can create an important archive reflecting a unique part of our global听culture today, and continue the story for future generations.鈥


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