Portrait of a Mandari group
 
   56 x 56 mm  | Negative film nitrate 
     
   
 
 
Date of Print: 
Unknown 
Previous PRM Number: 
JB.3.28 
 
Accession Number: 
1998.97.120 
Description: 
A full length group portrait of two men, a woman, girl and a boy at the left edge of frame. 
The woman and girl are wearing a metal chain apron above their skin apron, as well as a dancing stick ornamented at the top. 
The men are wearing several strings of beads around their waist, and one of them has his hand on the woman's shoulder, perhaps indicating a courting relationship. 
Photographer: 
Jean Carlile Buxton 
Date of Photo: 
1950 - 1952 
Region: 
[Southern Sudan]  Bahr el Jebel  Khor Moni 
Group: 
Mandari Köbora 
PRM Source: 
Ronald Carlile Buxton via Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology 
Acquired: 
Donated 1988 
Other Owners: 
Jean Buxton Collection 
Class: 
Clothing Accessory , Ornament 
Keyword: 
Ornament Body , Dance Accessory 
Documentation: 
See Related Documents File. Buxton field notebooks in Tylor Library. 
Other Information: 
In Some Notes on the Mandari of Equatoria Province, A.E. 
Sudan, (typescript notebook of c.1951 in Tylor Library, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford), book I, page 38-39, Jean Buxton notes that 'Sere [i.e. 
Mandari Köbora] women display a wide range of finery...Brightly coloured leather aprons, coloured with red ochre, are ornamented with many rows of red and white beads. 
Aprons of metal links are also worn, and with both the above a small skin - more abbreviated than that of the Boronga - is worn, tied round the waist in front and hanging down behind, leaving the front apron showing. 
The edges of the skin are often beautifully ornamented with coloured beads...To match the bead 'corselets' of the men, girls wear large 'courting' collars of beads which are hung round the neck and come down in front well over the breasts. 
They are usually in orange or red. 
Other decorations in the way of necklaces or pendants are worn, of cowry shells, metal rings or beads. 
Girls also wear iron and brass rings round arms and legs, similar to those worn by the men.' [Chris Morton 21/1/2005] 
Recorder: 
Christopher Morton 25/1/2005 [Southern Sudan Project] 
  

