"KUBAISM"
by Joe Pollitt
Acrylic Tiles
Size: 20cm x 20cm
Size: 20cm x 20cm
Date: 2015
Artist Statement: "The conceptional ideas here are to take the designs created in Central Africa from the Kuba Kingdom and stretch them inwardly, in order to create a sense of weightlessness and a feeling of suspension."
Guggenheim: The future of design is Africa
Source:  CNN Inside Africa
(CNN) Is African design having a moment? 
Not
 according to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, a denizen of contemporary 
art. Rather, the curators believe the continent's artists and architects
 are shaping the future of design entirely. In their latest exhibit, Making Africa -- A Continent of Contemporary Design, the museum showcases some of the freshest names in the art world as a whole (they just happen to all be African).
Shaping a new world order
Co-curators 
Amelie Klein and Petra Joos note that despite common perceptions that 
shape Africa as a land of "famine, corruption, or imposing landscapes," 
one of the most defining features of the continent is innovation.
"The
 world as we know it is in transformation -- politically, economically, 
socially, culturally and technologically. Anyone wanting to know how 
design can facilitate or even accelerate this change would be well 
advised to look to the south, especially at Africa, where the changes 
are very evident," she says. 
"African
 design covers a fascinating spectrum of concerns that goes beyond 
recycling, traditional craft, or humanitarian design."
Road to Bilbao
Researching
 for the exhibition "was a long process" Joos says, telling CNN about 
the many trips she took to Lagos, Dakar, Cape Town, Nairobi and Cairo. 
However she adds that it was mainly local artistic communities calling 
the shots.
"We had think tanks with 
intellectuals, directors and artists," she explains. They asked 
questions such as "What is design?" "What is Africa?" "What is African 
design?" the results of which found their way into the show's prologue.
"It's
 interesting because there was a lot of difference of opinion," says 
Joos. "They agreed; sometimes they disagreed. The visitor will see that 
in the exhibition."
Split into four 
sections, Making Africa negotiates many areas: "Prologue" addresses 
Western preconceptions; "I and We" looks at African solutions and 
responses to communication -- both at an intimate and societal level; 
"Space and Object" discusses environmental influences on creativity; and
 "Origin and Future" explores the notion of time.
Overall,
 120 artists helped participate in exhibition, which includes the work 
of design heavyweights like Nigerian photographer J.D. Ojeikere and 
British-Tanzanian David Adjaye. These titans of the scene make their 
presence felt alongside the likes of Afrofuturist Ikire Jones and 
sculptor Cheick Diallo. All have equal footing when telling the story of
 contemporary African design, and help showcase the diversity of its 
creative community.
Stretching out across the globe
Joos notes that 
the size of the African diaspora abroad has led to cross-pollination in 
the world of design, whereby Africans abroad influence and are 
influenced by the cultures that surround them. 
"We
 did an exhibition a few years ago when we only invited African artists 
living on the continent, but now it's absolutely impossible, because we 
have so many Africans going back and forth. They're living in Africa, 
but also in Paris, in London, even the United States."
This
 manifests itself in their work, she argues. "They're absolutely 
connected to everything," she says. "They are not limited by European 
design, for example. They know what's going on everywhere, and filter 
that through their culture and traditions."
Unlike
 European design however -- which Joos argues is "more formal" and 
"industrially realized" -- Africans are reveling in the journey towards 
the final object. "Africa [is] a hub of experimentation, generating new 
approaches and solutions of worldwide relevance, and [is] a driving 
force for a new discussion about the potential of design in the twenty 
first century."
"The process is more 
important than the result," Joos says; "this informal creativity is so 
African. It's not European, it's not American, and it makes a big 
difference to us."
'Making Africa -- A Continent of Contemporary Design' runs until February 21.





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