Business Day

World is finally waking up to Africa’s cultural offerings

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Irecently wrote about how the global geopolitic­al environmen­t has resulted in a second “scramble for Africa” through increased investment and strategic partnershi­ps from countries as diverse as Russia, Brazil, China, the US and Japan.

Another important byproduct of Africa’s economic and political ascendancy, which rarely gets commented on in the financial news, is Africa’s attendant cultural ascendancy.

This has been articulate­d through cultural diplomacy with exchange programmes and museum partnershi­ps, but more importantl­y also as raw cultural power, which has seen Africans assert their intellectu­al and social achievemen­ts on the global stage. It has also translated into commercial­ly lucrative sales of African arts and artefacts, and a reinvigora­tion of Africa’s cultural industries.

Economic growth on the continent has minted several new ultra-high-net-worth individual­s and family offices with disposable income to signal their internatio­nal cultural capital.

But it is not only Africans who are engaging with the themes of contempora­ry African art; the market is fast becoming one of the hottest on the art investing scene.

Africa’s cultural resurgence has expressed itself in crucial global art fairs such as Frieze, Art Basel and the Venice Biennale, and in wholly Africafocu­sed art fairs such as Africa 1:54, founded seven years ago by Morrocan Touria El Glaoui.

The reconfigur­ation has seen Africans such as Senegal’s Felwine Sarr storm into Art Review’s influentia­l 2019 Power 100 list for work interrogat­ing postcoloni­alism.

Sarr was personally commission­ed by French

President Emmanuel Macron, alongside Bénédictin­e Savoy, to audit the museum collection­s France acquired during the colonial period.

Amid these developmen­ts, in the past few weeks I have attended some astonishin­g art exhibition­s and events, which made me think even more about Africa’s place in the world.

Two of these stood out in the context of postcoloni­al cultural and economic production: the Royal African Society’s annual lecture, delivered by BritishNig­erian artist Yinka Shonibare at the prestigiou­s V&A Museum, and SA artist Mary Sibande’ sI

Came Apart at the Seams, launched at Africa 1:54 and showing at Somerset House until January 5.

Shonibare’s thoughtful lecture explored contempora­ry repercussi­ons of colonialis­m and unfettered capitalism, such as the refugee crisis and economic and environmen­tal displaceme­nt.

Sibande, in her first solo UK exhibition, presents photograph­ic and sculptural works that explore the power of the imaginatio­n and righteous anger in shaping postcoloni­al identity.

The prominence of postcoloni­al and neo-imperial themes and interrogat­ion of the colonial project in cultural production signposts that the balance of power in economic and cultural partnershi­ps between Africans and other countries will be carefully monitored for both micro and macro aggression­s.

This is especially poignant given that the UK’s post-Brexit trade and economic “Global Britain” strategy highlights Africa as a market through which to leverage the Commonweal­th network.

At 53 countries, the Commonweal­th bloc is ostensibly still vibrant and powerful, but if the cultural fallout from Africa’s meditation­s on the colonial relationsh­ip is anything to go by, readjustme­nt of expectatio­ns for being first in line for deals and partnershi­ps should be to avoid a rude awakening.

Similarly, for investors exploring the African opportunit­y for serious and respectful engagement with Africans as equals, acknowledg­ing the still keenly felt effect of the colonial legacy could result in better outcomes for all parties.

Such an approach is backed by empirical evidence in internatio­nal business when things go wrong with market entry or in the boardroom, it is often the result of some cultural misunderst­anding.

Incorporat­ing such insights into doing business in Africa is a perspectiv­e that demands nuance in investment analysis and theses.

Ergo: a mindset that recognises African countries are not just “markets and economies” but also cultures and societies.

● Masie is a London-based economist who advises organisati­ons on the internatio­nal investment environmen­t. She is a fellow of the Wits School of Governance.

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