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You are here: Home / African Design at the Vitra Design Museum

African Design at the Vitra Design Museum

Published by isabelwilcox on July 24, 2015


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Breaking new ground: Contemporary Design from Africa.

Life has changed a bit recently and I am reconnecting with my French past. I now spend some time during the summer months in a cute little bergerie nestled on a hill at the foot of the Luberon mountains. Surrounded by olive trees growing on terraces and with breathtaking views of the ruins of a medieval village perched on a hill adjacent to the dramatic gorge of the Petit Luberon I forget art for a moment and embrace nature’s wildness.

From there I drove to Basel for the art fair and had the unexpected pleasure to learn that there was an exhibition of African design at the Vitra Design Museum right over the border in Germany. The exhibition was curated internally with the help of guest curator Okwi Enwesor, also curator of the Venice Biennale. It challenges traditional expectations of African design that usually focuses on craft and artisanal objects.

In the words of Koyo Kouoh, founding director of Raw Material Company the exhibition studies “ the interrelated relationship between fashion, film, art, performance, music, industrial and product design, with internet and new media being the key reason for the seismic shift in the cultural landscape of Africa. “ There is a strong sense that design must contribute to the life of a place and the focus of design has shifted to become socially oriented.

In the richly informative catalogue of the exhibition Okwui Enwezor encourages the viewers to look at Africa through different lenses.

“The exhibition does not strive to present a complete picture of design in Africa. What the exhibition offers instead is a new story, one perhaps not known. It is one possibility among many for looking at Africa and an invitation in this regard to consider a wholly new perspective.”

While some veteran artists are included the focus is on the young generation (Africa has a huge youth population), its energy, entrepreneurial spirit, its concern with the contemporary and  the potential of urban spaces, and shared virtual/digital spaces. There is an atmosphere of awakening among artists in cities like Nairobi, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Lagos, Dakar, etc. Intent on correcting the idea favored by the Global North that Africa is a place of despair, the curators highlighted the burst of creativity that is happening as a result of the advent of the digital boom. I remembered a time six years ago when it was thought that places like Kenya had little to show for itself in terms of creativity. Sixteen creative ventures coming out of Kenya are represented in the exhibition! Things have come a long way!

Conveying that bustling field was not an easy matter as a lot of it is virtual  such as apps, blogs, and websites. The curatorial team created an aesthetically pleasing and highly informative exhibition tightly weaving technology with more object based works such as models, photographs, maps, sculptures, and clothes.

Divided into four parts (Prologue, I and We, Space & Object and Origin & Future) Making Africa challenges the idea of a one Africa with a new local perspective, new shared virtual spaces, an approach to urban life and architecture truly its own, and embrace of tradition while looking to the future in object based work.

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The exhibition opened with the work of Kenyan artist, Cyrus Kabiru’s C- Stunners that illustrate vividly this idea of shift of perspective. We need to change our way of seeing the continent, its people and lives and learn to listen: in the background I hear the voices of acclaimed thinkers speaking of Africa. Kabiru creates these extraordinary “eyeglasses” out of found objects and photographs himself wearing them.

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People’s perceptions of “Africanness”s is further challenged in the work of Kudzanai Chiurai Popular Mechanics whose portraits parody the traditional genre of heroic images and exposes the corruptive aspect of power

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Justin Dingwall’s photographic diptych Albus of a black albino model that question the idea of black and whiteness.

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The second section was like a huge database of personal blogs, computer games, Youtube videos of a partying youth culture, apps, crowd sourcing digital maps and wonderful photographs and prints.

I would recommend checking out the following sites, which provide a very useful database of African artists.

Internet portals such as Africa Digital Arts, Afrikadaa, Art Base Africa.

Browse the following apps and blogs:

Oju Emoticon App

Anakle (Bride Price App)

Izihothane

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Photographer Jody Brand’s blog: Chomma provides a window on a youth culture concerned with the here and now.

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Men’s Fashion has its place with the fondness of the famous Sapeurs de Brazzaville for colorful, and dandy like outfits. Hector Mediavilla (Allurex and his socks, 20003)

IMG_3122Chris Saunders from The Smarteez series. Saunders follows the creative process of four designers from Soweto (Kebi, Sibu, Floyd, and Thabo).

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Daniele Tamagni from Botswana Afrometals photographic series (2012) shows a youth culture that has merged tradition and the international metal scene.

Hassan Hajjaj photographic series L.V.Posses of young Moroccan women in headscarves on motorbikes also fuses traditional Islam with western luxury (Louis Vuitton logo).

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MISWude
Waxology is the product of the cooperation between jewelry and fashion brand MISWude and photographer Fabrice Monteiro.

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I loved Leanie van der Vyver video Scary beautiful where a young woman wearing absurd shoes struggles to walk in an awkward performance.

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The next section (Space and Object) focuses on living spaces. It is about architecture, urban life and includes virtual spaces such as maps and apps that have been created to contend with a lack of infrastructure and that have profoundly changed the life of people.

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The inclusion of the M-Pesa (Safaricom), a mobile money transfer that has revolutionized the way people pay for things in Kenya and now the world is a good indication of how forward looking this exhibition is. Creative thinking is increasingly finding its outlet in the creation of these new ways of living and working. It leads me to confirm this idea that I have recently discussed with an art dealer friend that the new avant-garde contemporary art will not be object oriented but increasingly virtual.

Map Kibera, a digital map is based on this idea of shared economies that are changing social spaces. This digital map of the largest slum in Nairobi includes information on security, water, sanitation, health, education, citizen journalism, and advocacy through blogs.

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The photographic work of Michael Subotzky and Patrick Waterhouse Ponte City captures the lives of the residents of the Ponte City skyscraper that was once a luxury building. Now in total disrepair communities of poor black people inhabit it. For over two years they took photos of every window, apartment door and TV set in building and created a mosaic-like snapshot.

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Justin Plunkett’s Con/Struct is a great shot! A vertical slum, a metaphor for a “piled-up dream” withstands gravity.

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James Muriuki“s Undefined Constructions:SeriesI

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Fabrice Monteiro’s photographic series The Prophet is as beautiful as much as they are disturbing. In transforming the ugly into the beautiful these surrealist images call attention to the dangers of environmental pollution.

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I was happy to see the work of Tahir Carl Karmali Jua Kali included. In homage to Jua kali craftsmen who make things out of recycled material Karmali took pictures of garbage pieces to create these collages and combined them with photos of the craftsmen.

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Tahir Carl Karmali, Dennis Muraguri, Tonney Mugo’s Jua Kali City. A collective project, and made from found objects these wheels are metaphors for the formal and informal economies.

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I liked the table made out of glass, steel and ceramics Docks table by Imiso Ceramics reflecting the checkered urban space that is Woodstock, Cape Town.

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Porky Hefer’s Humanest reminded me of weaver nests that I see each time I walk the Kenyan bush.

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Dominique Petot’s armchair Meridienne was elegant and dramatic though maybe not totally comfortable.

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Alassane Drabo Gourde Protectrice: a useful tool and a tribute to a ubiquitous object in rural West Africa. Maybe the first time the pot has been used as a lampshade!

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Amadou Fatoumata Ba Pouf Tresse made out of rubber tyres.

The last section -Origin and Future – acknowledges Africa’s past, its traditions and roots, and looks to the future.

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Omar Victor Diop Project Diaspora (Mame)

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Ikire Jones The Evan suit . From the collection The Untold Renaissance .

Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou (Musclemen): At once a tribute to the tradition of African photographic portraiture and a critique.

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Oumou Sy: Inspired by Senghor ‘s concept of metissage ( hybridization) traditional patterns and geometric shapes fuse into a contemporary vision.

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The exhibition ends with Goncalo Mabunda’s eloquent throne www. Crise.com made out of recycled weapons from the Mozambican Civil War. It is a critique of African military regimes yet also a reminder of the transformative power of art and the resistance and creativity of African civil societies.

I have just mentioned just a small sampling of the many artists included in the exhibition.

If you can’t see the exhibition I would highly recommend buying on Amazon the catalogue, which provides even more information than the exhibition. It is an invaluable database.

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Posted in Art, Culture Tagged Africa, Alassane Drabo, Amadou Fatoumata Ba, Chris Saunders, contemporary african art, Cyrus Kabiru, Daniele Tamagni, Design, Dominique Petot, Fabrice Monteiro, Goncalo Mabunda, Hassan Hajjaj, Hector Mediavilla, Ikere Jones, Imiso Ceramics, James Muriuki, Jody Brand, Justin Dingwall, JustinPlunkett, Koyo Kouoh, Kudzanai Chiurai, Leanie van der Vyver, Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou, M-Pesa, Map Kibera, Michael Subotzky, MISWude, Okwui Enwesor, Omar Victor Diop, Oumou Sy, Patrick Waterhouse, Porky Hefer, Tahir Carl Karmali
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