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Anima Mundi, Vatican City

Coordinates:41°54′23″N12°27′16″E / 41.90639°N 12.45444°E /41.90639; 12.45444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art and sculpture museums in Vatican City
Anima Mundi
Anima Mundi
The galleries of Anima Mundi in 2014
Anima Mundi, Vatican City is located in Vatican City
Anima Mundi, Vatican City
Location of the Vatican Museums within Vatican City
Established1927; 98 years ago (1927)
LocationVatican City
Coordinates41°54′23″N12°27′16″E / 41.90639°N 12.45444°E /41.90639; 12.45444
TypeEthnographicmuseum
Collection sizec.80,000[1]
DirectorFather Nicola Mapelli[2]
WebsiteOfficial website

Anima Mundi - Peoples, Arts and Cultures (previously known as theVatican Ethnological Museum) is a museum ofethnological art and artefacts in theVatican City. It is part of theVatican Museums.

History

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The main core of the collection arose from the Vatican Exposition of 1925. The exposition was instituted byPope Pius XI; its success led to the creation of theMissionary Ethnological Museum (Pontifico Museo Missionario-Etnologico) at Lateran Palace. At the formation of the new museum Pius announced that the "dawn of faith among the infidel of today can be compared to the dawn of faith which...illuminated Pagan Rome".[3] The museum opened to the public in 1927 and was moved to modern galleries in theVatican Museums in 1973.[3][1]

Wilhelm Schmidt was the inaugural director of the museum. 100,000 objects had been sent from around the globe for the exposition, 40,000 were chosen by a commission led by Schmidt; this formed the nucleus of the original collection. Additional objects were sourced from the Borgia Museum of Propaganda Fide that had been the collection of the 18th-century antiquarian andCardinalStefano Borgia.[1]

In the 2020s the museum's holdings were in excess of 80,000 objects and artworks.[1]

The museum was reopened in November 2019 under its new name, Anima Mundi, which means "soul of the world". The name was chosen byPope Francis. The director of the museum, Father Nicola Mapelli, said that the new name reflects the belief that "When we display objects, we don't display a dead reality, but something that expresses the spirit of a culture through its art". The director of theVatican Museums,Barbara Jatta, said that the new name declared that the museum was "...where the soul of the world is...Each visitor can find at least a small part of his or her cultural, religious and spiritual identity".[2]

The museum was redesigned between 2018 and 2020 by Studio Adrien Gardère and inaugurated in October 2019 by Pope Francis.[4] In his inauguration of the museum Francis said that "Transparency is an important value, especially in an ecclesial institution. We always need it! In these showcases, over the course of time, thousands of works coming from every part of the world will find space, and this kind of installation is meant to place them effectively in dialogue among themselves. And as works of art are the expression of the spirit of peoples, the message received is that one needs to always look at every culture, at the other, with openness of spirit and with benevolence."[4]

Collections

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The earliest objects to have entered the collection arePre-Columbian era artefacts sent as gifts toPope Innocent XII in 1692.[1]The collection received numerous objects from Catholic missionaries in the 19th century.[3] A notable collection in the museum is devotional objects fromPapua New Guinea collected by Father Franz J. Kirschbaum in the 1920s.[5] The collection includes 200 objects fromIndigenous Australians including 10 funeral poles fromMelville Island of theTiwi Islands, and wooden shields fromDarwin in the Northern Territory of Australia.[3]

The collection ranges from prehistoric artefacts over two million years old to objects from African, Native American, Islamic, Oceania and Australia, and pre-Columbian civilisations.[1]

The artefacts are displayed on a rotational basis for reasons of conservation.[1]

Selected objects

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Gallery

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  • The galleries of Anima Mundi
    The galleries of Anima Mundi
  • Depiction of Wandjina by an artist from the Walcott Inlet area, Western Australia
    Depiction ofWandjina by an artist from the Walcott Inlet area, Western Australia
  • Funerary poles from Melville Island, Northern Territory, Australia
    Funerary poles from Melville Island, Northern Territory, Australia
  • Ceremonial accoutrements of Papua New Guinea
    Ceremonial accoutrements of Papua New Guinea
  • The exterior of Anima Mundi
    The exterior of Anima Mundi

Bibliography

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefg"Ethnological Museum Anima Mundi".Vatican Museums. Retrieved21 February 2021.
  2. ^abcd"Vatican reopens and renames Ethnological Museum".Rome Reports. 17 November 2019. Retrieved21 February 2021.
  3. ^abcdJeanette Greenfield (26 January 1996).The Return of Cultural Treasures. Cambridge University Press. p. 93.ISBN 978-0-521-47746-8.
  4. ^ab"Studio Adrien Gardère: Vatican Ethnological Museum Anima Mundi". Studio Adrien Gardère. Archived fromthe original on 2020-12-02. Retrieved22 February 2021.
  5. ^Piepke, J.G., 2012. The Kirschbaum Collection of the Missionary Ethnological Museum in the Vatican. Anthropos 107, 560–564.https://doi.org/10.5771/0257-9774-2012-2-560

External links

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