Dogon village, Mali View larger

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Dogon village, Mali
Yann ARTHUS-BERTRAND

Art photography by Yann ARTHUS-BERTRAND of Dogon village near Bandiagara in Mali. The richness of traditional Dogon culture contributed to the adding of the Bandiagara Cliffs to UNESCO’s List of World Heritage Sites in 1989.

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Orientation Landscape
Color Brown

Dogon village, Mali

Yann ARTHUS-BERTRAND

Art photography by Yann ARTHUS-BERTRAND of Dogon village near Bandiagara in Mali. The richness of traditional Dogon culture contributed to the adding of the Bandiagara Cliffs to UNESCO’s List of World Heritage Sites in 1989.

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The Dogon are sedentary farmers who have lived in northeastern Mali for more than five centuries. They took refuge close to the Bandiagara Cliffs, near Mopti, in order to escape Islamization. Their villages consist of a grouping of concessions, each with a surrounding wall, home to a single family. Built of banco (a mix of mud and straw), their windowless rectangular homes have flat roofs on which the harvest is dried. Each concession has several granaries. The grain reserves are stocked in these generally cylindrical structures, which have cone-shaped straw roofs and are elevated on stones. The Dogon, who are believed to number 300,000, are known both for the quality of their craftsmanship and their specific animist practices. The richness of traditional Dogon culture contributed to the adding of the Bandiagara Cliffs to UNESCO’s List of World Heritage Sites in 1989.

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