African Art in London

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Aboudia @ Jack Bell

Aboudia

Aboudia

Jack Bell Gallery continues its fruitful relationship with Ivorian artist Aboudia this year, with a solo exhibition of his new series of paintings. Quitte Le Pouvoir addresses the ongoing struggle for existence in the city of Abidjan in the aftermath of 2010-11’s Ivorian crisis, when violence broke out in the streets forcing the artist to take refuge in a basement.

Show: until 16th February

Opening hours: Tues-Sat, 10-6

Jack Bell Gallery
13 Mason’s Yard, St James’s, London
SW1Y 6BU


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Les Fantomes @ Jack Bell Gallery

Aboudia (2011)

Jack Bell has moved – and how. The gallery has fled the coach-infested thoroughfares of Victoria, and re-emerged in the vastly more genteel surroundings of the West End’s Mason’s Yard. As a statement of intent, it could hardly be clearer; Mason’s Yard was the location of the legendary Indica Gallery where John Lennon met Yoko Ono, and is now home to the likes of White Cube. Bell means business.

Jack opens up his new gallery with a group show of painting, photography and sculpture from West and Central Africa, featuring several of the artists who graced the walls of his first space in Victoria: Aboudia, Leonce Raphael Agbodjélou, Paa Joe and Hamidou Maiga are brought together with newcomers Afedzi Hughes and Bandoma under the title Les Fantomes. Go and take a look.

Private view:
Weds 21 Sept, 7-9

Show:
22 Sept – 29 Oct

Opening hours:
Tues-Sat, 10-6

Jack Bell Gallery
13 Mason’s Yard, St. James’s, London
SW1Y 6BU


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Aboudia Abdoulaye Diarrasouba @ Jack Bell

Aboudia Abdoulaye Diarrassouba (2011)

Opening this Wednesday is an exhibition by the Ivorian painter Aboudia Abdoulaye Diarrassouba. During the violence that followed last year’s disputed presidential elections in Côte d’Ivoire, rather than fleeing with the masses, Aboudia took cover in a basement studio in the capital city of Abidjan and began to paint what he saw; as he has explained, he painted partly in order to record events for posterity, but mostly just for himself. The results are now on show in a solo exhibition at Jack Bell gallery, the artist’s first outside his home country.

Private view: 22nd June, 7-9
w/ Live set by Vamanos (Ghetto Bassquake / Secousse Sound System)

Show: 23rd June – 1st September

Opening hours:
Wed-Sat, 12-6

Jack Bell Gallery
276 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London
SW1


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Frédéric Bruly Bouabré @ Tate Modern

From the series 'Signes relevés sur des oranges' or 'Readings from Signs Observed in Oranges' (1991) - Frédéric Bruly Bouabré

It takes someone quite particular to make 48 near-identical ballpoint pen drawings of ‘divine signs’ found on pieces of orange peel. When you consider that the same artist has also made 70 drawings of signs revealed by cola nuts, and a similar series about clouds, you could be forgiven for worrying a little. In fact, these works, currently on view in Tate Modern’s ‘Poetry and Dream’ section, are just the tip of the iceberg. Frédéric Bruly Bouabré’s oeuvre also includes a ‘museum’ of 162 African faces, 448 pictograms setting out an alphabet for recording his native Bété and other languages, a fantastic series depicting diplomats from every one of the world’s 193 countries, and ‘Publicités’, which covers such items as Ralph Lauren shoes and Starbucks coffee. Put together, these and other works form the impressively titled ‘Connaissance du Monde’ (‘Knowledge of the World’), the artist’s collected creative output, which he has been working on since 1977. Some might be intimidated by the scale of this project, but not Bouabré, who doggedly continues to jot things down that interest and amuse him, and all in an exceedingly orderly fashion. Presumably he will continue until he decides that he knows everything (or at least everything worth drawing about), or fate decides that he knows enough – whichever comes first.

Bouabré was born in the village of Zéprégüé, Côte d’Ivoire, in 1923, and worked as a civil servant for the French colonial authorities, later the Republic of Ivory Coast. His life was transformed on 11th March, 1948, when he had a transcendental experience: “From the moment when the heavens opened to my eyes and seven coloured suns drew a circle of beauty around their mother sun, I became Cheik Nadro, the man who never forgets…” This inability or refusal to forget anything has informed his artistic practice ever since, and his work reflects a need to catalogue objects, people, places, images, messages and even sounds, all using the same ballpoint pen/coloured pencil, postcard-sized format. It could appear obsessive, but there is something both enchanting and calming about Bouabré’s methodical yet utterly eccentric approach. As an artist, poet, philosopher and folklorist, he explores his immediate surroundings and the wider world with seemingly inexhaustible curiosity and often wry humour, offering up his findings as he goes along.

These days the artist lives and works in Abidjan, the fourth largest French-speaking city in the world, but most of his work has found its way out of Côte d’Ivoire and into the Geneva-based private collection of Italian businessman Jean Pigozzi. Bouabré’s rise to international fame came largely thanks to his inclusion in the high-profile 1989 show Magiciens de la Terre at the Pompidou Centre in Paris, which sparked solo and group exhibitions around the world for many of the featured artists. The kinds of criticisms levelled at that show – that it exoticised the artists and their work through a kind of neo-primitivist fixation with ‘authenticity’ and ‘mystical’ qualities – could equally be applied to some more recent displays featuring Bouabré’s work, and the Pigozzi collection more generally. According to art historian Olu Oguibe, artists like Bouabré are only popular in the West because ‘they satisfy the longing for fantasies, fetishes and shamanism.’ (If you’re happy to admit that that is indeed what you’re after, there’s still time to go and see this, which includes another Magiciens alumnus, Cyprien Tokoudagba).

For me, though, the presentation at Tate Modern speaks less of these sorts of stereotypes and more of a truly visionary individual, whose way of dealing with the world can intrigue and inspire regardless of the artist’s background or the viewer’s preconceptions. In the context of the wider ‘Poetry and Dream’ collection, sandwiched in between works from big-shot European Surrealists, Pigozzi’s loan takes on a whole new aspect. And lest the visitor nonetheless fall into a neo-primitivist trap, curator Kerryn Greenberg has also included a short film in a nearby cubbyhole, which includes interviews with the man himself and gives an insight into his creative process and universalist outlook, as well as his savvy attitude to the business of being an artist. Asked whether anybody can do it, Bouabré replies: “Yes, but you have to not be ashamed. Even if people laugh, you have to keep on dancing, and people will applaud you at the end.”

The show continues until 27th March.

Opening hours:
Sun–Thurs, 10-6
Fri-Sat, 10–10

Poetry and Dream, Room 4, Level Three, Tate Modern
Bankside, London
SE1 9TG