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Your journey

This is your journey so far and there are so many more people to meet!

Print- Jimmy Nelson
01/29

The Miao People

Illustration Lantern- Miao People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
02/29

The Mundari People

Illustration Bull- The Mundari People - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
03/29

The Nagula Community

Illustration Vulkano- The Nagula Community - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
04/29

The Maasai People

Illustration - The Nagula Community - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
05/29

The Marquesans People

Illustration Statue- The Marquesans People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
06/29

The Chichimeca People

Illustration Traditional Headpiece- The Chichimeca People - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
07/29

The Q'ero People

Illustration- The Q' ero People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
08/29

The Maori People

Illustration Turtle- The Maori People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
09/29

The Lopa People

Illustration Longhorn- The Lopa People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
10/29

The Karo People

Illustration Tree- The Karo People - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
11/29

The Kaluli People

Illustration Traditional Headpiece- The Kaluli People - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
12/29

The Rabari People

Illustration Tiger- The Rabari People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
13/29

The Huli People

Illustration Traditional Headpiece- The Huli People - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
14/29

The Himba People

Illustration Antelope - The Himba People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
15/29

The Gauchos

Illustration Man on Horse - The Gauchos - Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
16/29

The Dolgan People

Illustration Siberian House - The Dolgan People- Jimmy Nelson

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
17/29

The Bardi People

Illustration Kangaroo - The Bardi People- Jimmy Nelson - Homage to Humanity

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
18/29

The Kazakh People

Illustration Traditional Headpiece- The Kazakh People - Jimmy Nelson - Homage to Humanity

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Print- Jimmy Nelson
19/29

The Wodaabe People

Illustration Lobster - The Wodaabe People - Jimmy Nelson - Homage to Humanity

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20/29

The people of Walcheren

Symbol Zeeland- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

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21/29

The people of the Zaanstreek

Symbol Zaanstreek- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

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22/29

The people of the Hindeloopen

Symbol Hindeloppen- Jimmy Nelson

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23/29

The people of the Axel

Symbol Zeeland Axel- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

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The people of the Marken

Symbol Marken- Jimmy Nelson- Between the Sea and the Sky

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The people of the Huizen

Symbol Huizen- Jimmy Nelson

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The people of the Urk

Symbol Urk- Jimmy Nelson

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The people of Friesland

Symbol Volendam- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

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The people of Noordwest-Veluwe

Symbol Nunspeet- Jimmy Nelson

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The people of Volendam

Symbol Volendam- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

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03/30

The people of the Axel

Symbol Zeeland Axel- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky
23/29

The people of the Axel

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
23/29

The people of the Axel

Symbol Zeeland Axel- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky

A Land Apart

The folds in the traditional costumes women in Axel wear are magnificent, pointing up like wings, or like tail fins on a 1950s American car.

The style originally began with small pleats in the cloth around the shoulders but grew higher over time as women−keen to outdo their neighbours−used packing paper to create ever more ingenious constructions.

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
The Zeeuwse shoreline

It wasn’t easy to walk around with a design like that on your shoulders, nor was it particularly comfortable, but that didn’t bother Axel’s women. The very purpose of this traditional dress was to demonstrate that the wearer could afford this impractical style. Their rings−broad bands covering the finger right up to the knuckle− also made it clear: this woman doesn’t have to work at all! The engravings on the forehead jewellery women wore further indicated their status: two swans meant that she was well-off, and three that she was extremely rich.

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
Marian, Carlien, Ineke & Sjaco | Axel, Zeeland | 2021 Art Print
Gallery-Art-Jimmy Nelson-Amsterdam - Zeeland - Axel - Between the Sea and the Sky

In addition to one’s place on the social ladder, these dress codes also conveyed other messages. Aprons, for example, were folded with great precision after being washed, tied with a piece of string, and then stored in the cupboard like a parcel. Visible creases on an apron were a sign of diligence and clean- liness. You didn’t iron them out, but rather showed them off− the more creases, the better!

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel- The Netherlands- Between the Sea and the Sky
Marian, Sjaco, Carlien & Marijke | Axel, Zeeland | 2021 From Between the Sea and the Sky
Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky

These distinctive traditional outfits−some of the most striking in the Netherlands−are the result of Axel’s centuries-long isolation. The town and the fields around it were surrounded by wide estuaries, which meant that the inhabitants rarely left the island and few visitors came to stay. As Calvinists, they didn’t have much need for contact with the Catholics to the east anyway, and while their neighbours in the west shared the same Protestant faith, they were so poor and lived such frugal lives they might as well have been a world away. The town flourished for a long time, the nutritious marine clay on the fields guaranteeing abundant harvests. Fishermen only had to lower their nets to be guaranteed a good catch. The town’s location on the West Scheldt river also meant it benefitted from passing trade headed for Antwerp and Ghent.

The people of Axel enjoyed showing off their wealth, especially with their clothes, but they could also be thrifty. Once the farmers had dug up their potatoes, they went back over the fields to gather anything that had been missed there was always enough left for at least one more meal! This tradition earned the people of Axel the nickname ‘potato pickers’, meant as an insult by outsiders, but proudly embraced by the locals.

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
Axel women | Anneke Bal | Axel, Zeeland | 2021
Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
Naomi | Axel, Zeeland | 2021

When Belgium broke away, Zeelandic Flanders was cut off from the rest of the Netherlands, and Axel became an island a second time over. If you didn’t want to cross the border, the only way to reach the town was by boat. Becoming part of Belgium wasn’t an option.

They even adopted a new anthem that made it clear that the Zeelanders belonged to the Nether- lands, though of course it also contained a hint of independence, of pride in their ‘land apart’.

Photo- Jimmy Nelson- Zeeland Axel - The Netherlands - Between the Sea and the Sky
Axel, Zeeland | 2021 Art Print
Gallery-Art-Jimmy Nelson-Amsterdam - Zeeland - Axel - Between the Sea and the Sky
Stories

Wooden Shoes

A clumsy horse treading on your toes, or a plough accidentally veering off course with a pair of wooden clogs on your feet, you’ll be fine! They’ll also keep your feet dry and won’t absorb the mud either. All in all, clogs are the perfect footwear for farmers. For centuries, practically everyone but rich city folk wore wooden clogs.

For a long time, Zeeland was one of the main centres for clog making. In the winter, when there wasn’t any other work to be done, the farm labourers would hand carve clogs around the wood stove. Later, they used machines, increasing their productivity from eight clogs a day to twelve pairs an hour. It soon paid off to start making clogs full-time!

03/30

The people of the Axel

Symbol Zeeland Axel- Jimmy Nelson - Between the Sea and the Sky