Victor Bandeira and the collections of the National Museum of Ethnology: notes from fieldwork

Ana Temudo*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debate

Abstract

Decolonisation has become a significant topic in contemporary museum and heritage studies. The research project “Representational Politics of Guinean Heritage in Portuguese Museums in the Transition from Colonial to Postcolonial Period: Histories, Transits and Discourses” discusses the meaning and value of the Guinea-Bissau heritage collected during the colonial era that is part of Portuguese museum collections. This essay focus on a documentary about Victor Bandeira (1931-), as part of the PhD research project. Bandeira is a collector that established an informal relationship with the National Museum of Ethnology (former Overseas Museum of Ethnology), in Lisbon, from the mid-1960s onwards, collecting a representative part of the museum’s nonEuropean collections. He remains a living witness to this museum’s beginning years and can be considered a vital component of the museum’s history. Bandeira has been an object of enquiry in previous studies. However, there was missing an audio-visual perspective or, as the anthropologist Sarah Pink describes – a visual and sensorial ethnographic approach. This short article explores, from fieldwork observations, the relationship between two interdependent biographies: Victor Bandeira and the National Museum of Ethnography, reflecting on the data gathered and the experience of interviewing Bandeira, contributing to review past collecting practices and the museum’s history.
Translated title of the contributionVictor Bandeira e as coleções do Museu Nacional de Etnologia: notas de trabalho de campo
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-14
Number of pages14
JournalMIDAS
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Postcolonialism
  • National Museum of Ethnology (Portugal)
  • Victor Bandeira
  • Provenance research
  • Collecting

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