Sunday 3 March 2013

CAG on museums: African art and artistic inspiration


I’ve been working at the Great North Museum Hancock for two months now, and I’m finally getting more familiar with their ethnographic collections. I’ve discovered a collection of mainly Dogon and Ashanti artworks collected in the 1970s. As far as African art goes, I don’t have a world of experience and knowledge, but I was reminded of the first presentation on Dogon art that I ever saw in my favorite documentary series The Tribal Eye.

In this series, David Attenborough treks across the world exploring the arts of tribal cultures in 1975. The first episode in the series is on the life and customs of the Dogon people of Mali. Attenborough draws a connection between the fervor for Dogon artworks in the European art world and also links the use of African artifacts that inspired artists like Picasso.

Me looking at a Dogon equestrian god sculpture in the stores
The idea of ethnographic collections being inspired by European art world collection trends has been looked at as one of the least culturally valid reasons to assemble a collection, but in reality expressions of art from all parts of the world have been inspiring collectors and viewers of these artworks across continental boundaries. For example, there was a copy of the Ice Age female figure found in Italy (thought to be 22,000 years old) that Picasso had in his studio for inspiration. This figure can be seen in the current ‘Ice Age Art: arrival of the modern mindexhibition at the British Museum.

Female figure lent to British Museum by Château-Place Charles de Gaulle, copyright BMP
The point being, there hasn’t been much work on the Hancock collection of 1970s African art (purchased by the Hatton Gallery), but I’m really excited to look deeper into the collection and come up with some interesting research points.

After all, even one of biggest collectors of Dogon art, Lester Wunderman said, ‘Dogon art can hardly be called primitive. It contributes to expanding and enriching the life of those for whom it is carved; it is an integral part of Dogon society. Nor is that society as I saw it, necessarily primitive either...It is simply another course, an alternative method of human organization.’

Asanti bronze weight, man with fowl and bowl
These collections weren’t made as part of an agenda to classify and categorize cultures, unlike many world collections, but were seen as a way of relating to another world through the shared paradigm of art.
Ashanti bronze weight, man with rifle

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