News & events > Exhibition: "Playing with Culture: Traditional Asian Play and Games"
07 Apr 2018 - 30 Sep 2018

Exhibition: "Playing with Culture: Traditional Asian Play and Games"

Between 7 April and 30 September 2018, the Asia and Pacific Museum in Warsaw, Poland, an ASEMUS member, presents the exhibition "Playing with Culture: Traditional Asian Play and Games", which showcases traditional games and play rooted in the rich cultural heritage of Asia. The exhibition has been curated by Tomasz Madej. The aim of the exhibition is to better acquaint Polish audiences with the history of games, the role they have played, and the cultural message they convey. The show constitutes a journey through the world of traditional leisure activities engaged in in the courtyards of Indian palaces, in Japanese monasteries, Mongolian yurts, and Polish playgrounds. The exhibition is not specifically targeted at aficionados of Oriental culture; because of its subject, it introduces Asian culture to children and teenagers in one the most pleasant of ways – through play. It also aims to prompt reflection on the world around and the different nations whose games it presents.

Background

Play goes back longer than culture […],’ wrote Johan Huizinga. It is the most spontaneous and primeval form of human activity. It also gave rise to first games. Over the course of history, these in turn became a crucial element of our everyday life, transcending age, linguistic and geographical differences. In their leisure time, people have been playing and participating in games to lift their spirits, relax, or bond. Games would teach useful skills, form part of rituals, convey moral principles, and bring generations together, while serving as a mirror of the culture that produced them. For thousands of years, they have accompanied men and women on the road or sea. They would adapt to suit new habitats, change their names and rules. They died and then resurrected again, attaining new meanings in different environments and regions. They are a proof of how cultures interact. You will discover their tracks in ancient frescoes and sculptures, or if you simply look around yourself. Nowadays, with the omnipresent advances in technology and globalisation, the significance of play and games has dwindled and they have been pushed aside by the screen, a sign of the times. Play no longer takes place outdoors; it has comfortably put its feet up at home. Asian play activities and games constitute an extensive legacy of Asian cultural heritage. In the still relevant words of the excellent early 20th-century researcher of games, Eugeniusz Piasecki, ‘A nation’s games convey specific, individual characteristics of this particular nation, and are its indisputable property much the same as its clothing, decorative arts, customs, language […].’ (1916: VIII). Play activities and games allow us a glimpse of ancient belief systems, thus improving our understanding of distant cultures. They are a culture-building phenomenon. Their significance has been recognised by UNESCO, which has acknowledged that traditional play activities and games form a major part of our cultural heritage that should be protected on a par with historical artefacts, architecture, or regional languages.

Exhibition partners

The exhibition "Playing with Culture: Traditional Asian Play and Games" has been mounted in association with the Kolong Tangga Education and Toy Museum in Yogyakarta, Indonesia; the World Traditional Culture Play Association of South Korea; the Embassy of Japan, the Embassy of Philippines and the Embassy of Malaysia in Poland; the Academy of Physical Education, Poznań, and Polish Carrom Association. The patrons of the exhibition are: the Polish Committee for UNESCO, the Embassy of India, the Embassy of Indonesia, the Embassy of the Republic of the Philippines, the Embassy of Sri Lanka, the Royal Thai Embassy and the Embassy of Vietnam in Poland. For further information about "Playing with Culture: Traditional Asian Play and Games", please visit http://www.muzeumazji.pl/en/temporary-exhibition/playing-with-culture-traditional-asian-play-and-games-2/