Global Empire
The curator of an ambitious new exhibition explains how Portugal brought the world together
- By Amy Crawford
- Smithsonian.com, June 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
What’s the legacy of the Portuguese Empire?
I think it was bringing people together. It wasn't so much a land-based empire. They didn't have large territorial holdings like the Spanish. They mostly had a network of trading settlements and they had to cooperate with people. They had a certain amount of firepower too, but in Asia and Africa they were dealing with large, established political units so they had to work out accommodations.
What happened in the course of setting up a commercial empire is they also set up a mechanism for the production of new types of art. In Africa, India, Japan and China, the Portuguese were commissioning works of art for the European market. So they really were in the vanguard of creating cross-cultural art as well.
Were they guilty of the same brutality that we associate with other colonial powers?
They don't have a completely clean record. In the Indian Ocean in particular, the Portuguese governors, the ones who established the empire, they were people of their time, and they were relatively ruthless. It was on a much smaller scale, but they certainly had no hesitation in battling, capturing people, executing people, setting ships afire.
The other complicated part of the story, which we’ve not shied away from in the exhibition, is the slave trade. It preceded the Portuguese, but they became involved in it. Once sugar caught on in Brazil they needed huge amounts of labor. It was really the sugar production in Brazil, and the Caribbean a little bit later, that encouraged large scale slave transport from Africa to the New World. That was the first wave.
This exhibition is very broad. How did you condense and organize it?
We tried to keep the focus really on Portuguese activity, and we tried very hard to tell the story with the minimum number of objects we could. We tried to get the right objects, and there was a huge number of lenders. There was a lot of relevant material, but we tried to restrict it to the minimum amount of works that would tell the story.
What are some highlights of the show?
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Comments (4)
Hi
Thought you might like to have a look at this documentary examining the relationship between a gallery attendant and his favourite work in the gallery.
Thanks
vimeo.com/theattendant
Posted by ScreenSceal on July 2,2010 | 07:45 AM
I think that coin is called "MAKUTA" and was produced during the reign of Queen D. Maria I. In 1785 there was copper coins of 1, 1/2 and 1/4 macutas. See the following link: http://www.portugalmoedas.com.pt/detalhes.asp?ID=2166 It shows a Makuta coin from 1789. Best regards from Lisbon Francisco
Posted by Francisco Lebre on May 1,2009 | 10:55 PM
I have one also, and it has a counter stamp on it too. Let me know if you find out more about it and vice-versa I'll let you know.
Posted by Andy Randall on April 8,2009 | 08:14 PM
I have a coin that is dated 1785 portugueza africa could you tell me more about it?
Posted by reginald rogers on April 1,2008 | 05:25 AM