|
How do we look upon African art? The
West has long viewed those carved objects taken from Africa as
"curiosities" or reflection of a "primitive"
mind. The phrase "primitive art" has implicit derogatory
implications. It was only when European artists early in this
century "discovered" the aesthetic qualities of African
carvings that the objects were finally dignified as art. Many
Westerners considered them all the more remarkable since the objects
had somehow emerged from the "untutored and savage world".
African art was finally being acknowledged, but not African Culture.
Art and its cultural
significance
In the last thirty years African Studies
has emerged as a discipline, and serious research into African
culture has sought to explain more about the art and its cultural
significance. Classification and functional identification have
greatly enhanced our understanding. Field studies continue to
provide extensive documentation, but often minimizing the aesthetic
qualities of the African art.
Our challenge is to appreciate African
art and culture, to acknowledge both equally, without the prejudices
and stereotypes that have been set into our minds through decades
of distortion. To view African art, Westerners must go trough
an evolution of sorts, pealing away attitudes of superiority,
ethnocentric snobbery, and theoretical biases. We must try to
confront the objects in their fullness, as representation of culture,
civilization, and the human experience.
African art and its
social context
A symposium organized by the National
Museum of African Art at the Smithsonian Institution explored
the studying of African art in a broader contextual sphere. It
affirmed that the social context in which African art appeared
is an integral element in its appreciation. African art speaks
from a unified milieu in which there is no clear separation between
the social and aesthetic, the religious and the familial. This
unity is visual, conceptual, and contextual elements requires
more than a perfunctory identification of a piece...
The more that we learn through research,
the better able to de-code the art, which is so often viewed out
of context, presented according to Western standards of taste,
stripped of costumes, and of the songs which praised its values.
African art and African
culture
African art is a great visual book of
African culture, and we have been illiterate... As we seek to
understand the art, we discover a complex conceptual world of
ancient, elaborate systems of thought and belief. This is the
world African art invites us to enter, a rich cultural expression
which lives on vitally today in Africa as well as in the Americas.
Hence, these exhibitions attempts to identify
particular cultural values conveyed through traditional African
art and to suggest continuities for these values within the African-American
experience.
Charles Bordogna
|