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EXHIBITION REVIEW “HOMECOMING”-
Ghanaian expatriate
artists' exhibition
Nov 5th –Dec 5th 2009; The Artists
Alliance Gallery, La, Accra.
By Dr. Nii Bonney Andrews
The exhibition catalogue states that the “exodus” of
Ghanaians in the 70’s and 80’s has resulted in
another art genre from the Ghanaian expatriate
artists.
But what exactly constitutes this genre? Is it any
different from the contemporary art produced by
those Ghanaian artists that did not travel? Indeed
are there ANY Ghanaian artists that have NOT
traveled?
The exhibition consisted of works by seven artists-
El Anatsui, Owusu Ankomah, Kate Badoe, Eva Campbell,
George Hughes, J. C. Sarpong and Tafa Fiadzigbe.
Only Anatsui lives in Africa - in Nigeria; of the
rest only Ankomah lives outside North America, he
lives in Germany. All of them, except Ankomah,
earned their under graduate degree from KNUST
College of Art.
The installation located on the first floor of the
gallery building was divided into three separate
areas. The first area, which was the largest, had
displayed on the wall directly opposite the entrance
one of the large bottle top and wire cloths (“Over
decorated General”) of Anatsui that are currently
the rage on the international art circuit.
This is the first time one of these masterpieces has
been displayed in Ghana- it is absolutely stunning
in its monumental scale and aesthetic quality; it is
wicked! Every Ghanaian should see it.
On either side of this piece were four fine examples
of the iconic jigsaw wooden panel sculptures from
the early 90’s. They included his classics-“Mammoth
Crowd” and “Unfolding the Scroll of History”.
The juxtaposition of these and the bottle top cloth
clearly hinted at the former as forerunners of the
later. It would have been instructive to have the
panels installed so that they could open as a book
or hang like a cloth- a feat that has been achieved
by some curators.
Paintings by Eva Campbell were placed on the wall
opposite the Anatsui pieces. They featured mainly
sepia toned portraiture of women or girls in
different situations. Most of the works were in
watercolor and were handled with sensitivity. There
were also two memorable oils depicting agrarian
activities.
Within the same gallery, on an adjacent wall, were
the works of Owusu Ankomah. The signature monochrome
muscular silhouettes in action poses with body
lettering were an interesting counterpoint to the
work of Campbell.
When Ankomah’s figure laden bodies look towards a
celestial object, Fosu in the exhibition catalogue
suggests that it denotes “some mystic universal
message destined for cosmic communication”.
Communication about the contradictions of current
realities has been the message of the L’Enfant
Terrible of contemporary Ghanaian art. George Hughes
has since the mid-90’s carved a niche for himself as
an artistic rebel.
His works are provocative multiply textured,
brightly colored mixed media creations with
juxtaposed elements and symbols that “blur the
distinction between the familiar and the novel”
His art held no clichés as he served up poignant
viewpoints on police brutality (Polease), state
terror (Massacre of the Innocents, Probable Features
II), feminism (Red Contention) and so called free
markets (Mouse Trap).
The adjoining gallery room devoted to his work was
awash with color, texture and symbolism. His themes
and execution have earned him a solid rating among
the post-modernists. Hughes must be considered as
transvangarde.
The third gallery room featured the more subdued
works of Kate Badoe. Most of the works were in ink
or water color.
Badoe’s art continues the exploration and
development of the “sculptural idiom” pioneered in
Ghana by Kofi Bucknor. Her stylizations in “Lullaby
Choir” and “Ruffled Past” are novel and noteworthy
developments of the idiom.
In discussing sculpture, the oft repeated narrative
has been that Africa’s grand sculptural tradition
has been a hindrance to contemporary African
sculptors. J. C. Sarpong takes this viewpoint head
on.
In evocative pieces such as “Drummer”, “Mother
Africa” and “Girls in Salon”, JC Sarpong brought a
freshness to well worked themes in African
sculpture. The detailing and compositional balance
of his bronze work rivals the quality of some of the
best traditional/classic pieces that are now part of
the universal canon.
The abstractions of Tafa Fiadzigbe are firmly rooted
in the modern international school. Both his choice
of materials and themes are eclectic, often inviting
contemplation. The merging color bands (sometimes
with text) suggest a convergence of ideas that
require decisive action such as “Cry me a River” or
“Drum song for the Innocent”.
Unfortunately, there were several not insurmountable
drawbacks to the exhibition; the gallery lighting
was poor, thereby making appreciation of color,
contrast and texture less than satisfactory. In some
sections of the exhibition, the works were too close
together. The proof reading of the catalogue text
and quality of photographs need to be improved.
All told, “Homecoming” is a good exhibition that
documents and showcases works of high quality by
Ghanaian expatriate artists. The Artists Alliance
Gallery under Prof. Glover, continues to bring fine
contemporary Ghanaian art to the larger public and
deserves every commendation.
Dr. Nii
Bonney Andrews
The author is a neurosurgeon and Chief of Neurosurgery and Vice-President of
neuroGHANA.
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