Vitra Design Museum unmasks the new face of African design
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There are 650 million registered mobile phones in Africa. That’s more than in Europe or the US. Though its hard to know how many, a good percentage of these phones will have access to the Internet. And it is this idea of a super-connected continent that is at the centre of the Vitra Design Museum’s new exhibition ‘Making Africa: A Continent of Contemporary Design’.
The museum spent two years visiting and talking to 70 designers, artists, researchers, architects, gallerists and curators in Africa’s creative and entrepreneurial polestars - cities such as Lagos, Dakar, Cape Town, Cairo and Nairobi. And ‘Making Africa’ identifies a new generation of African designers, artists, architects and cultural entrepreneurs - 120 of them feature in the exhibition - who see little value in European-model distinctions between design and fine art or between creative disciplines. As 'digital natives' (an unfortunate choice of words perhaps), they offer a global audience an alternative to Africa’s bad news narrative. By redefining design's relationship to modernism, they are making Africa a new hub of design innovation and experimentation, particularly in their use materials.
The exhibition takes in the eyewear sculptures of Kenyan artist Cyrus Kabiru, the furniture of Malian designer Cheick Diallo, the photography of Mozambican Mário Macilau and the Nigerian J.D. ‘Okhai Ojeikere. Also featuring is the architecture of Francis Kéré, Kunlé Adeyemi and the African-born, British-based David Adjaye.
‘Making Africa’ draws parallels to the work of photographers such as Seydoy Keïta and Malick Sidibé and the South Africa-based Drum magazine during the 1960s, as well as the first wave of postcolonial architecture.
After its stretch at the Vitra Design Museum, the exhibition will move on to the Guggenheim in Bilbao this autumn. It is accompanied by a 352-page book, the first comprehensive overview, so Vitra insists, of African contemporary design.
The work on show identifies a new generation of African designers, artists, architects and cultural entrereneurs who blur the boundaries between disciplines, as in Gonçalo Mabunda's part-sculpture, part-design throne pieces, Jürgen Hans
'Mame' from the series 'Studio of Vanities' by Omar Victor Diop,2013, 2014, Courtesy Magnin-A Gallery, Paris
The creatives on show - swiftly becoming known as Africa's "digital natives" - offer a welcome alternative to Africa's bad news narrative 'Nuit de Noël (Happy Club)' by Malick Sidibé, 1963, Courtesy Magnin-A Gallery, Paris
The exhibition looks how the 120 artists use materials to redefine the face of African modernism across the globe. Nigerian-born, Brooklyn-based Vigilism explores just that in pieces such as 'Where there's gold: mining way station', 2014 , Vigilism
Also taken into account is the first wave of postcolonial architecture across the continent, offering stimulating parallels to the pieces on show Chai House (architects unknown), Nairobi, ca. 1970
'Onile Gogoro Or Akaba' by J.D. 'Okhai Ojeikere, 1975, Paris
'Alito, The Guy with Style' from the 'Moments of Transition' series by by Mário Macilau, 2013, London
Rendering of Skhayascraper by Justin Plunkett, 2013, Kapstadt/ Cape Town
ADDRESS
Vitra Design Museum, Charles-Eames-Str. 2, D-79576 Weil am Rhein
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