Logótipo Próximo Futuro

"Painting, Performance, Politics": primeira retrospectiva de El Hadji Sy

Publicado19 Fev 2015

Etiquetas senegal arte africana El Hadji Sy

Imagem: 31ª Bienal de São Paulo, 2014


Painting, Performance, Politics é a primeira retrospectiva do artista e curador nascido em Dakar em 1954, El Hadji Sy, Weltkulturen Museum, em Frankfurt, a partir de 5 de Março.Conhecido pelo seu activismo, a sua obra tem questionado o status quo político. Em 1980 criou o espaço Tenq, um termo que significa 'articulação' e tem sido um membro activo do laboratório AGIT’ART desde a sua fundação nos anos 70. 

O site Contemporay and entrevista-o, a dias da inauguração.

JG: Senghor is famous for having initiated a tapestry manufactory in Dakar and later at Thiès. How much did it influence you as a young artist?

EHS: In the 1960s and 1970s, many artists made maquettes – designs – to be woven into tapestries, and the Senegalese government bought them. Firstly, I didn’t like this form of exploitation of the artist and their ideas, their creativity. Secondly, I am more of a fresco person. I’ve done works that are sometimes 40m long. You can’t do that with tapestries. I also build large canvases from the bags once used to contain rice, sugar or coffee. They have different a porosity and aren’t treated in the same way as industrial canvas. And unlike murals or mosaics, I can take them off the wall and put them up wherever I want. I like the idea of transforming a classified material and uplifting it into something more precious, more noble.

 

JG: But when I look at the way you hang some of your paintings on the wall, on wooden bars, it definitely has the style and aesthetic of tapestry…

EHS: Yes, but I mock it! I perform a critique of tapestry.

 

JG: You play with the aspect of the artwork as a fluid, mobile, performative structure. In the show, we see paintings as movable screens, kites hanging from the ceiling, banners placed outside the museum that move with the wind, and other canvases that lie on the ground like carpets. Is it important for you to literally spread your work across diverse locations, from the museum into the street?

EHS: Yes, it’s never just about one place. That’s why I am not too fond of the limited space of a gallery environment. When I think of exhibiting, I imagine sitting in a truck that contains all my work and driving to a small village and stopping at the marketplace because it is a public space. I start to install my art and people can approach it and enjoy it. That’s my idea of the mobility of art. I always loved the circus for its ability to appear out of nowhere, unfold everything at the marketplace, do something, enchant people, and disappear again. It’s not about one fixed location.

A entrevista completa, aqui

Artistas africanos para 2015 escolhidos pelo Le Monde

Publicado11 Fev 2015

Etiquetas África arte africana

Barthélémy Toguo (Camarões) e Kader Attia (Argélia) são dois dos cinco artistas destacados pelo jornal francês Le Monde para o ano de 2015, que já marcaram presença na programação do Próximo Futuro. 

  • Barthélémy Toguo, Venise en ligne de mire

Peu d’indices ont filtré sur les artistes invités à la Biennale de Venise (9 mai-22 novembre). Mais d’après nos informations, le Camerounais Barthélémy Toguo sera de la partie. Le doigt sur le pouls de nos sociétés, cet artiste engagé en pointe les soubresauts et les mutations. À Venise, il devrait déployer soixante-quinze sculptures en bois représentant des tampons administratifs géants. Leurs slogans tournent autour des idées d’exil et de migration, de la violence urbaine, de la militarisation, des nouvelles maladies…


  • Kader Attia, tous azimuts

En 2015, l’artiste franco-algérien Kader Attia fera feu de tout bois. Du 21 mai au 30 août, il a droit à une rétrospective au Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne. Au menu, le choc des cultures, l’héritage colonial, les dérives identitaires, autant de sujets clés d’une œuvre foncièrement politique. La question postcoloniale est au cœur de l’installation « Independence disillusionment » présentée jusqu’au 29 mars à la Biennale de Kochi-Muziris en Inde. Inspirée des timbres émis après l’indépendance des pays africains, elle vient rappeler les lendemains qui déchantent, les utopies futuristes remisées. La relation/friction entre sociétés traditionnelles et modernité occidentale traversera enfin son projet à la Biennale d’art contemporain de Lyon (10 septembre-3 janvier).

Pode ler o artigo completo, em Les cinq artistes africains de l’année 2015

de Artefato a Arte

Publicado23 Ago 2013

Etiquetas arte africana MET Nova Iorque

Female Torso

Henri Matisse  (French, Le Cateau-Cambrésis 1869–1954 Nice)

© 2011 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

A relação do Ocidente com os objetos produzidos em África e a sua classificação como peças de arte, abordadas pela coleção do Metropolitan Museum of Art de Nova Iorque numa exposição que termina a 2 de Setembro.

"At the start of the twentieth century, the appreciation of African artifacts in the West shifted dramatically: from colonial trophies and ethnographic specimens, they became modernist icons worthy of aesthetic contemplation. Well established is the role played in this transformation by modern European artists such as Pablo Picasso, André Derain, and Henri Matisse, who began collecting African art about 1905, finding in its bold shapes a source of inspiration. Lesser known, but no less constitutive to the recognition of African material culture as fine art, is the history of its reception in America over the subsequent two decades.

New York emerged as a new platform for modern art after the groundbreaking 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art, better known as the Armory Show, which opened the door to dynamic transatlantic art commerce. This surge was bolstered in the summer of 1914 with the outbreak of World War I, which provoked the displacement of the art market's epicenter from Paris to New York. Numerous galleries opened in New York that year, and all sought to acquaint their audience with the newest European trends—including African art."

Mais textos e imagens para ler aqui e uma conversa para ouvir aqui

A paixão do Dubai pela arte africana

Publicado1 Abr 2013

Etiquetas art dubai bisi silva arte africana

Durante 4 dias a feira de arte do Emiratos Árabes recebeu mais de 25.000 visitantes, cumpriu um longo e diversificado calendário de eventos e registou um apreciável volume de negócios. 

A curadoria de Bisi Silva na Art Dubai Marker, apresentando a artistas da África Ocidental, com destaque para Nigéria, Camarões, Mali, Gana e Senegal, e o Global Art Forum foram o centro das atenções da 7ª edição da Art Dubai

"With Marker, Africa announced its presence on the contemporary global art stage. The gathering of these diverse artists from West Africa, working on a theme as City in Transition, stressed the importance of changes across some of the countries’ big cities. And that some of the artists’ works reflected the changes – not necessarily because the theme confines their visual narratives – showed the cultural or identity-loss as the prize to pay for changes in the city."
Vale a pena conhecer melhor aquias discussões e conclusões do forum e as perspectivas que se abrem em termos de mercado e formação. Aqui há mais para ler sobre a Feira