Paris Exhibition Sheds Light on Anonymous Masters of West African Sculpture
“Les Maîtres de la Sculpture de Côte D'Ivoire," an exhibition currently on display at the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, presents works of West African sculpture with an emphasis on individual sculptors.
This show takes African art outside the
traditional western-centric narrative, where work by African
artists have often been lumped together. Highlighting the individual
styles and skills of these artists presents the works as art, rather
than "objects" (see 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair is Full of Good and Tough Questions).
Curators Lorenz Hamberger and Eberhard Fischer
have selected works by sculptors including Uopié, Kuakudili, Nkpasopi,
Tame, Sra, Tompieme, and Si, as well as unknown artists with
identifiable styles like the Essankro Master or the Master of the Arched
Back.
The works originate from various places in
Western Africa, including the Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, Guinea, and
Burkina Faso. Most of the artists lived and worked in the 19th and 20th
centuries, but the show ends with a contemporary section, with works by
Koffi Kouadou, Nicholas Damas, Emile Guebehi, and Jems Robert Koko Bi.
With this exhibition, the curators are
contesting the traditional decontextualization of African artworks,
whose forms inspired Modernists like Pablo Picasso and Amedeo Modigliani (see $1.9 million for African Mask Once Owned by André Breton).
"Masters of Sculpture from Ivory Coast" is on view at the Musée du Quai Branly until 26 July 2015
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