“A lot of people think I go to the streets to sort through garbage for my creative supplies but that’s not what happens. I noticed that people say this, especially in media because they want to use poverty as an overarching theme to rack in audiences.”
Archive: articles
Sanaa Gateja: Radical Care
Gateja’s work is also very reminiscent of traditional African craftworks like basket and mat weaving. It must be a conscious choice for a goldsmith like himself who trained in Europe and comes back to search and discover better gold in traditional techniques that his forefathers perfected a long time ago. It is his way of keeping these practices alive but also adding his own spin to the magic.
Matt Kayem on the work of Sanaa Gateja from Uganda
A new day, 2020, Paper beads on bark cloth, 214 x 144cm
Abstraction in African American Art: A Long Journey
For a long time, abstract work of African American artists was not popular. The art world and the market were not interested. Figuration dominated. That has changed.
Rob Perrée gives an explanation
Odili Donald Odita, Flower, 2019, copyright the artst
Figuring Blackness: on the blackness of the works of Cinga Samson
Iyabanda Intsimbi / The metal is cold, the South African artist Cinga Samson’s solo exhibition at the FLAG Art Foundation in New York, is composed of a series of (self)portraits and ‘private’ scenes that border on the ritual and funereal. Cinga’s portraits are pensive, sans pupil, cool and casual, confidently posing and adorned in gold. His dark palette of oils sinks his Black figures into ‘their’ world, threatening to disappear them into the Darkness that looms right behind
Vusi Nkomo on the Blackness of the works of Cinga Samson.
Ibhungane 9, 2020
Aaron Samuel Mulenga and Mapopa Hussein Manda
In the end I discovered a show making bold social commentary – speaking to the past, the contemporary and the future of Zambia, if not Africa.