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Posted On: 20 July 2014 01:52 pm
Updated On: 12 November 2020 01:51 pm

MAB- FAAP, Sao Paulo, and Qatar Museums organize “Pearls” exhibition in Brazil

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Sao Paulo, 20 July 2014 – Pearls exhibition, organized by Qatar Museums, is set to open at the Museu de Arte Brasileira (Brazilian Museum of Art) in Sao Paulo, Brazil, from 20th of July 2014 to 28th September, as part of the Qatar Brazil 2014 Year of Culture.

About the Exhibition

On display will be over 200 pieces of jewellery and works of art showcasing the extraordinary variety of colour and shape of natural and cultured pearls. The exhibition will examine how pearls have been employed over centuries in both East and West as a symbol of status and wealth, how tastes vary in different cultures as well as the changing designs of jewellery with pearls.

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Commenting on the significance of the “Pearls” exhibition, Safiya Saif Al Hajari, Director of Strategic Cultural Relations at Qatar Museums, stated: “The idea behind organizing the ‘Pearls’ exhibition is to pay tribute to our ancestors who made many sacrifices and depended on the pearls trade to sustain their livelihood. Through organizing this exhibition, Qatar Museums aims to enhance awareness among the Brazilian community about the significance of pearls in Qatari history. We look forward to this exciting exhibition which highlights a common historical aspect for both Qatari and Brazilian people.”

The exhibition supported by Qatar Petroleum International and Shell as Platinum Sponsors, will be a highlight for the Qatar Brazil 2014 Year of Culture which aims to forge new partnerships in education, sport, creative industries and science, while promoting an awareness and appreciation of each other’s culture, achievements and heritage.

The exhibition will begin with an insight into the natural history of pearls and the pearl fishing trade from across the Arabian Gulf to Europe and Asia, since Antiquity. A collection of rare pearls and pearl-bearing mollusks will demonstrate how Gulf pearls have long been some of the most desirable and valuable in the world. It will also reveal the often dangerous working methods of pearl divers and show the trading practices of pearl merchants in the Gulf, together with examples of equipment required for weighing and valuing pearls.

The second part of the exhibition will explore the representation of pearls in jewellery and highlight how the design changed through history, taking the exhibition up to date with contemporary work made by designers practicing today. The exhibition will also follow the invention of the cultured pearl and its production on an industrial scale initiated by Kokichi Mikimoto in Japan. He succeeded in developing the necessary technology to establish ways of making pearls affordable for every woman to wear. Today in East Asia and the South Seas an impressive variety of cultured pearls are found in unusual colours.

The jewellery and works of art will be drawn from the Qatar Museums’ collections, alongside objects from Mikimoto & Co, Yoko London and Alfardan, Qatar.