Daily Dispatch

Pan-African exhibition seeks to herald continent's art scene

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Five towering wooden figures dwarf visitors to the “Lend Me Your Dream” exhibition at Dakar’s Museum of Black Civilisati­ons.

The sculptures of fire-darkened cedar stand in a circle, as if deep in conversati­on.

The imposing work by Ivorian artist Koko Bi is meant to show the strength of Africans outside their homelands.

It also echoes a central goal of the ambitious travelling show: to forge stronger cultural understand­ing between Africans within Africa. To this end, organisers amassed what they say is an unpreceden­ted number of works by around 30 prominent contempora­ry African artists for the first pan-African art exhibition to tour the continent.

“Too often, the trajectori­es of artists from Africa have been built through exhibition­s in Paris, Berlin, London, New York,” senior curator Yacouba

Konate says in the introducti­on to the show.

In contrast, this project launched in the Moroccan city of Casablanca last June and will end in Marrakech later in 2020, after touring south via Dakar, Abidjan, Lagos, Addis Ababa and Cape Town.

The drive to redraw the map of contempora­ry African artcomes as African government­s step up pressure on Western museums to return artefacts seized during the colonial era. Around 90% of Africa’s cultural heritage is believed to be held outside thecontine­nt.

The more than 100 artworks in “Lend Me Your Dream” are in a range of media, from photograph­y and collage to painting and sculptures of wood, metal or salvaged materials.

Some tackle issues including migration and the legacy ofcolonial­ism. Burkinabe artist Ky Siriki’s sculpture “Africa facing its destiny” shows a white couple offering briefcases of loans to a group of black people in exchange for raw commoditie­s. Other pieces are more abstract, such as Algerian YazidOulab’s untitled paintings of tendrillik­e black, white and grey lines or the works by Senegal’s Viye Diba that incorporat­e vivid scraps of traditiona­l wax cloth. The artists’ countries of origin are not mentioned in the descriptio­ns next to their work, as if encouragin­g the viewer to see the art in a continenta­l rather than national context.

Senegalese painter Soly Cisse, whose oils are also featured, said he liked that the exhibition was adding works of art as the tour progresses.

“It is a journey that we are doing together. That is the dream actually,” he said.

“We are in an idea of seduction, of dialogue, of communicat­ion, of sharing.”

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