Mail & Guardian

Artistic heritage gets a home

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In November, two weeks before MCN opened, a report commission­ed by Macron was published. It laid out the intellectu­al foundation­s for the restitutio­n of cultural plunder to Africa. Drafted by Senegalese economist Felwine Sarr and French art historian Bénédicte Savoy, the nonbinding report includes a detailed timeline.

The Sarr-savoy report motivates for the immediate return of some two dozen artefacts from Benin, Ethiopia, Mali, Nigeria and Senegal. Immediatel­y after the report’s publicatio­n, Senegal’s culture minister, Abdou Latif Coulibaly, called for the return of all Senegalese artworks held in France.

The new museum, whose generous galleries were still empty two months before opening as administra­tors prevaricat­ed over what to show, may well be the ideal home for this looted patrimony.

Not so, said Ery Camara, a Senegalese-born curator and museum specialist when we met in the southern Mexican town of Oaxaca. The new museum’s direct proximity to the sea makes climate control and conservati­on mechanisms imperative, he explained. “There is no technology to look after the collection­s” — even temporary ones.

Senegal also does not have profession­al conservato­rs capable of restoring the necklaces, pendants, pearls and medallions currently housed in Quai Branly, all of which are earmarked for immediate restitutio­n to Senegal. Ifan, Camara learnt on a visit in May, outsources conservati­on to Paris.

“How can you build a museum without training people?” asked Camara.

Léopold Senghor, Senegal’s charismati­c first president, whose poetry inspired my opening sentences, appreciate­d the problem. To this end he sent Camara and three other young Senegalese to study conservati­on and museology in Mexico.

This chapter in BCN’S long history is routinely glossed over.

The idea for a museum of black achievemen­t germinated shortly after Senegalese independen­ce in 1960, and was a talking point at Fesman, the month-long culture and arts festival held in Dakar in 1966. But Dakar is a city slowly in a hurry.

In 1974 Senghor visited Mexico. His itinerary included a stopover at Mexico City’s National Museum of Anthropolo­gy, a jaw-dropping monument to Mexico’s pre-columbian heritage. The museum’s designer, Pedro Ramirez Vazquez, was soon contracted by Senghor to do something similar in Dakar. The United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on even footed the architect’s bill.

According to Camara, who went to Mexico in 1975 and has lived there ever since, the original design proposed a complex of three museums to be built near Dakar’s university — to ensure a feedback loop between symbol and further education.

Senghor’s successor, Abdou Diouf, whose term was marked by unpopular economic austerity programmes, shelved the paper project. Camara forged a successful career in Mexico, hosting musical shows for rapper Akon’s Senegalese father and even becoming deputy director of the Anthropolo­gy Museum so esteemed by Senghor.

In the early 2000s, Abdoulaye Wade, Senegal’s third president, revived the museum plan — albeit in his own image. Wade’s cultural legacy is most visible in the 49m bronze statue of an idealised family near the ritzy suburb of Ngor. Local architect Pierre Goudiaby Atepa designed this landmark in conjunctio­n with a North Korean company.

The pivot east was indicative of changing geopolitic­s, which has also influenced the outcome of the new museum.

A Chinese contractor built MCN, which was also largely financed by Beijing (to the tune of $34-million). Since resuming diplomatic ties with Senegal in 2005 China has become the country’s second-largest trading partner after France.

Speaking at an event in Oaxaca attended by Camara, Nigerianam­erican art historian Chika Okeke-agulu spoke about the “cultural recolonisa­tion” of Africa. He also likened Dakar’s new touristfoc­used museum to Cape Town’s Zeitz Museum of Contempora­ry Art Africa, a modish but fraught portside project.

“It is symptomati­c of how new money can be useful, but oftentimes it creates monstrosit­ies and white elephants,” said Okeke-agulu.

China’s influence is palpable inside Dakar’s museum, in which the inaugural exhibition­s include a display of Chinese masks. Possibly as telling is MCN’S safety signage: it is all in Chinese and English, in a country of Wolof and French.

The museum’s circular design is another point of contention. Some have likened it to the traditiona­l design of Wolof homes. Camara, who recently visited Beijing, sees a Chinese pagoda.

“It is really surrealist­ic to think that this is the venue for African arts and civilisati­ons,” he said.

Despite his many reservatio­ns, Camara has remained a generous ally. In 2016, when MCN’S physical completion suddenly pointed to the horror of a vacuum — of things to show as much as of creative leadership — Camara was invited to address Senegalese bureaucrat­s and cultural administra­tors.

He cautioned them against the politicisa­tion of culture. “I told them that a museum is not just a mirror in which you see yourself; a museum is more than that.” It requires investment in soft infrastruc­ture: people, training, networks, alliances and, most importantl­y, vision.

He predicted the hurry that filled the museum for its opening would generate some goodwill, followed by a slow and precipitou­s decline into obsolescen­ce similar to Ifan and the poorly maintained slavery museum on nearby Gorée Island.

“They don’t have an idea of what the museum can be, or what the museum has to be,” said Camara. Others in Dakar share in his grief over the fate of an optimistic project that has been hijacked by hubris and the politics of patronage.

 ??  ?? Black achievemen­t: The Museum of Black Civilisati­ons was finally financed and built by the Chinese. Some see a Chinese pagoda in the design, but others say it reflects the design of Wolof houses. The artwork housed in the new museum are the works of artists from the past, some long forgotten, and contempora­ry creatives.
Black achievemen­t: The Museum of Black Civilisati­ons was finally financed and built by the Chinese. Some see a Chinese pagoda in the design, but others say it reflects the design of Wolof houses. The artwork housed in the new museum are the works of artists from the past, some long forgotten, and contempora­ry creatives.
 ??  ?? Photos: Seyllou/afp
Photos: Seyllou/afp
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