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The Matter of Making
  • Manage No DI00000875
    Country Republic of Korea
    Author Ms. Anne Pedersen (Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage)
    Published Year 2019
    Language English
    Copyright Copyright
    Attach File Preview (ENG)
Description When thinking of practices and expressions of intangible cultural heritage (ICH), traditional crafts making is perhaps the most tangible manifestation. However, when recognizing the potential of crafts making in empowering the individual, it is worth first looking beyond the physical craft objects to the processes behind them. Actually, to their very genesis. The act of making is ingrained in the beginnings of our human experience. It is essential to our nature and offers a deeper meaning and understanding of our humanity and identity. Furniture maker Peter Korn describes how craft making can be a holistic experience with the things around us, can invite a sense of meditation and self-transformation.1) As a maker, the individual is in control, the knowledge and skills are within you, and you can independently take ownership over your own development and production. Crafts making can as such be a liberating sensation and at the same time a meaningful bond or lineage to your geographical place, identity, culture and heritage. At its very roots, crafts making offers dignified, meaningful opportunities, the chance to do a job well done and make a product of quality in a world of disposable, low quality objects.

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