CURRENT EXHIBITION

Bancroft Gallery

Transforming African Modernism
Sept 20–Nov 3

Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Artists Tools




September 20–November 3       
Bancroft Gallery: Transforming African Modernism: 25 Years of Zimbabwe Stone Sculpture (1980—2005)
OPENING RECEPTION: Friday, September 20, 6–8 pm

Press Release Transforming African Modernism

 

Transforming African Modernism: 25 Years of Zimbabwe Stone Sculpture (1980-2005)

 

South Shore Art Center will present an exhibition of stone sculpture from Zimbabwe, opening on Friday, September 20.  1980, the year Zimbabwe was born as an independent post-colonial state, marked a milestone for the country’s contemporary art. Independence brought new opportunities and wider horizons as the western art world began to turn its gaze on newly emerging countries around the globe.  This exhibition, Transforming African Modernism: 25 Years of Zimbabwe Stone Sculpture (1980-2005) which covers the 25 years that followed independence, presents Zimbabwean sculptors in a new light, juxtaposing works by the “masters” of the 1960s generation with those of younger artists. Rooted in the artists’ worlds the works, especially those created from the 1990s on, show how those worlds expanded in terms of form, technique, and subject, and move beyond local references to mirror the events of their times.

 

While Tapfuma Gutsa, among the most prominent of the artists on view, harbors few illusions that art can intervene politically, it was in full view of the horror of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda that he produced one of his richest pieces, a ritualistic work about death, perversely titled  African Genesis. He believes that a work of art "is a gadget of influence” a gesture that the artist puts into the world to provoke a reaction. “It grips you, or it shocks you... and sometimes even the artist is shocked.”

 

While its hardly news that cultural products--books, movies, television, music and art--have been widely available in most of Africa for decades, the construct of an untainted primal "Africa" in the art of the continent is more recent. . As culture has become increasingly portable and transportable everybody's parameters are expanded. In the twenty-first century there are many Zimbabwean sculptors working beyond the traditional monolith in provocative ways.

 

“Modern art in Africa is vital, marked by its movement. It will not stop still so that we can attempt to place it in categories.”

 

Philip Ravenhill

 

 

There will be a reception, open to the public, on Friday, September 20 from 6 to 8 pm. The exhibition will continue through November 3rd and is sponsored, in part, by Panopticon Imaging in Rockland, MA.


 

September 20–November 3       
Bancroft Gallery: Transforming African Modernism: 25 Years of Zimbabwe Stone Sculpture (1980—2005)
Dillon Gallery: Vistas: World’s End and BeyondJoAnne Chittick, Constance Cummings,
James Earl, Margaret McWethy and Frank Strazzulla, Jr.

Faculty Feature: Eli Cedrone

OPENING RECEPTION: Friday, July 19, 6–8 PM

 



Images at Top Banner: Joanne Kaczowka—Peonies, Michael Weymouth—Penobscot Bay, David Petty—Female Face

 

Images from top left: James Marten—Abstract Painting #22, Desmond Herzfelder—People in Pink (diptych detail), Mary Smith—Alfante, Spain, Lynne McCauley—Blue Sunset, Danielle Stanton—Harvest Mouse, Ted Polomis—Pear with Apple, Marianne deVaux—Grey Lady Near Lorraine's