How Law Manifests Itself in Australian Aboriginal Art

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2013
Journal Erasmus law review
Volume | Issue number 6 | 3/4
Pages (from-to) 167-172
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Paul Scholten Centre for Jurisprudence (PSC)
Abstract
The article How Law Manifests Itself in Australian Aboriginal Art will discuss two events at the Aboriginal Art Museum Utrecht from the perspective of a meeting between two artistic and legal cultures. The first event, on the art and law of the Spinifex people, will prove to be of a private law nature, whilst the second event, on the art and law of the Wik People, will show characteristics of international public law. This legal anthropological contribution may frustrate a pluralistic perspective with regard to the coexistence of Western law and Aboriginal law on the one hand and of Utrecht's Modern Art Museum and the presented Aboriginal Art on the other. It will show instead the self-evidence of art and law presented and their intertwined connection for the Aboriginal or indigenous peoples of Australia.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at http://www.erasmuslawreview.nl/past_issues/Volume06Issue03-04/How_Law_Manifests_Itself_in_Australian_Aboriginal_Art
Downloads
ELR_2013_03_003.pdf (Final published version)
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