Image of two Tagalog women wearing semi-traditional clothing
Text
Full face image of two women (one seated) wearing semi-traditional clothing. [Rounded corners]
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Map Pitt Rivers Museum
Metadata
Creator
Photographer: comte des Cantons de Montblanc
Subject
Image
Publisher
Publisher / Press: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris)
Date
Date of print: 1870 (uncertain)
Type
Print, Photograph, Portrait
Identifier
1951.11.63.478
Origin
Philippines (Tagalog)
Provenance
Herbert Henry Coghlan, Newbury Museum.
Photographer: comte des Cantons de Montblanc
Printer: Jacques-Philippe Potteau
Expedition or compiler: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris) Publisher / Press: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris)
Photographer: comte des Cantons de Montblanc
Printer: Jacques-Philippe Potteau
Expedition or compiler: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris) Publisher / Press: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris)
Acquisition Date
1951
Short description
Research Notes - The comte des Cantons de Montblanc was a Belgian entrepreneur who visited south-east Asia during the 1860s: W. G. Beasley, Japan Encounters the Barbarian: Japanese Travellers in America and Europe (New Haven, 1995), p.101. [PG 25/5/2011]
Display status
Not on display
Official Website
Collection
Cite this Page
Photographer: comte des Cantons de Montblanc, “Image of two Tagalog women wearing semi-traditional clothing ,” Mapping Philippine Material Culture, accessed March 28, 2024, https://philippinestudies.uk/mapping/items/show/27838.
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Sensitive Content
Mapping Philippine Material Culture collates digital material from institutions, and some of this material is inherently colonial and contains words, terms and phrases that are inaccurate, derogatory and harmful towards Filipino and Filipino diasporic communities. Catalogue transcriptions, book titles, exhibition titles and museum titles may contain harmful terms. We recognise the potential for the material to cause physical and mental distress as well as evoke strong emotions. Owing to the scale of the collection’s data, a process to implement sensitive-content warnings in the displayed data is still incomplete. The material within the catalogue does not represent Mapping Philippine Material Culture’s views. Mapping Philippine Material Culture maintains a strong anti-colonial, anti-racist position and affirms its support for centring the humanity of historically marginalised and disenfranchised communities.
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