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EVANGELINE J. MONTGOMERY: building altars to ancestors
In theorizing the epistemological limits of Pan Africanity in the last decade of the twentieth century, proponents of this view do not subscribe to a simplistic view of history and tradition, nor do they conceive of their own subjectivity as fixed. Subjectivity is a dynamic process that enables them to engage, rethink, and redefine themselves and their histories. Having been written out of history as a result of racist and economic (labor) considerations, African American artists are very much aware of the conflicted ways Americaness mediates cultural memory and existential experiences. "I'm black and proud," is not merely a musical slogan as it is a loaded political commentary on U.S. Race relations. African American artists of the pre-1990s generation possess a multivalent, discursively dynamic view of history that rejects the fixity and closure implicit in the White construction of history as a stable set of true statements about events. Historically discriminated against because of their ancestral roots, Africa has loomed very large in the consciousness of African Americans. Sterling Stuckey, the eminent African American historian, effectively undercuts any ideas that this Africa-identification is a recent twentieth century phenomenon. He contends that "large numbers of African Americans have for centuries identified with Africa" (1994, 120-137), and that such "identification has been reflected in Back-to-Africa movements, missionary efforts, historical-cultural references...and the affirmation of one's African origins" (ibid. 120).10 Concurring, Barry Gaither, the director of National Museum of Afro-American Art, traces this African-centered consciousness to the eighteenth century when African Americans consciously identified as African.11 He outlines a dynamic Pan-African world stretching through Africa, North and South America, the Caribbean, and Western Europe, and in which people are tied together by the common bonds of ancestry and struggles against racial oppression.12 While exploring the channels through which Africa's artifacts circulated in the African American community in the late nineteenth century, Alvia Wardlaw reveals that missionaries like William Shepperd "spread(..) firsthand knowledge about the ancient cultures of Africa while recruiting missionaries" (1990, 33). Though historical evidence confirms that Africans in diaspora maintained contact with Africa and Africans long before the end of the nineteenth century, definite social transformation occurred as a result of global dispersal. These occurred in both the sociological character of their lives in new regions, their ideas about Africa, and the attitudes and value their new realities fostered. Grace Nichols, the Afro-British poet memorably and accurately represents this existential transformation when she reminisces "I have crossed an ocean / I have lost my tongue / from the root of the old one / a new one has sprung" (1983). Still, even with this acknowledgment of change, the notion of continuity remains a vital part of Nichols poetic conceptualization of the "long memoried woman" and of the experiences of Africans in the Americas. This continuity is reflected in the comments of Lydia Cabrera's informant in El Monte whose father was Congo and mother was Yoruba. "At home I had to speak Yeza and Congo, and just as I would learn the catechism and the prayers, I would also learn how to pray, salute, and worship in lengua (an African language).One would master that which was here, but knowledge about "other there" was also required" (cited by Isabel Castellanos 1996, 44). Most poignantly, the imagery of "a long memoried woman" and the insistence to learn about "other there" captures the idea of linkage that explains the survival of African traditions and value. The traditions of cabildos (Cuban ethnic associations), Òrìsà worship, and Macumba affirms the passionate outburst of new songs, polyrhythmic music, dances, and carnival-masking that "sprung" from African rhythms, symbolic systems and practices, beliefs about life and death, and creativity and art. Research in many African diasporic communities reveal that the metaphysical and spiritual symbols of the BaKongo, Akan, Yorùbá, Fon, Igbo and Efik, were preserved in specially defined community spaces and practices - Òrìsà worship, the Haitian omphor, Abakua, and Macumba - that reinforce historical and cultural ties. Identity is constructed in a dynamic complex of action and change. Montgomery's fiber sculptures, Duality Principle I and II and Spirit Mother (figs. 1)http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/images1.2/nzeg/index.htm, make allusions to this construction by identifying two relational poles - one in the U.S. And the New World, and the other on the continent. These two poles reflect the histories of two groups of people who have different social histories at the phenomenological level, but share cultural histories at the ideological level. While everyday reality stresses a history of dissonance and difference, continuity is underscored at the ideological level both through particular and select rites and rituals, and through self-reflection and cultural recollection. Continuing in the diasporic practice of ancestral recollection and refiguring of contemporary identity is Evangeline Montgomery, a sculptor, jeweler, printmaker, photographer, and mixed media artist, presently living in Washington, D.C. Between 1965 and 1973 while living in San Francisco, an avalanche of personal problems created fissures in her psyche that gradually realigned her on a Pan African axis. Subsequently, galvanized by the liberation ideology of the Civil Rights cause, Montgomery confronted the multifaceted forces in her life including the reasons for the disenfranchisement of African American artists in publicly funded art institutions. Becoming an arts advocate, she led the fight against their under-representation in the Bay Area, and through exhibitions successfully mediated between the Oakland Museum of Art and the Black arts community (Andrews 1975, 64-66). Appointed as the Ethnic Art Consultant by The Oakland Museum, Montgomery curated eight exhibitions for the Museum that showcased both established and newly emerging Black artists. These exhibitions include New Perspectives in Black Art (1968), Black Untitled (1970), Sargent Johnson Retrospective (1971) (fig. 2), and William H. Johnson, Painter. Writing in the heady days of the Civil Rights' and the Black Nationalist movement in the arts, Samella Lewis, the doyen of African American art, contended that the "aesthetics of a people is directly tied to the mainstream of their existence" (1969, vol.1, vi-v). In the 1960's and 1970's, artists in the African American mainstream were cogently responding to the pressing issues of Black cultural identity in the U.S. Many like George Smith felt "a spiritual and visual closeness to the principal forms of traditional art in Africa...[believing]...that in order for an artist to create and develop truth in his art he must draw strength from his heritage... Hence]...I look to Africa" (1968, 20).13 Carraway asserts that "[i]n 1957, I decided to reassess and redirect my energies in painting because the forms I painted...were not related to the direction I had in mind. This meant going to Africa... My exposure to the Makonde sculpture caused different forms and ideas to take shape in my mind and lead me towards a new and positive approach to painting" (ibid, 22). Montgomery's articulation of an Africa-identified personality and a new aesthetic voice were facilitated by two other significant events in her life: a prolonged period of residency in Nigeria from 1962 to 1965; and her extensive discussions on the iconography and philosophy of African art with artist friends, Arthur Carraway and Arthur Monroe. Together with other artists in the National Conference of Artists in different parts of the United States, she searched for an Africa-based aesthetic forms and visual language that did not degenerate into a literal copying of the icons, but meaningfully extended the abstract stylistics of African art. Selecting forms that "spoke" to them, they retranslated the forms to take advantage of existential conditions in the U.S. Faith Ringgold puts it eloquently that they made these forms American so that they became African American art (her emphasis,1991). So, in 1978 when her world was falling apart: the end of a marriage, the loss of a mother, no job, no family, no financial means of support, Montgomery intuitively did what diasporic Africans did in Brazilian Candomblé, Haitian Vodun, Jamaican Pukuminia, Cuban Lucumi, and the Hoodoo cultural rites of Southern United States. Like her Old World and New World ancestors, she enacted the historic practices of invoking one's ancestors, a rite that is still performed by many contemporary Fang, Mende, Igbo, Bakongo, Yorùbá, Akan, and Ibibio. Establishing sympathetic affinity with the artistic tradition of the BaKota of Gabon, Montgomery drew from that heritage to invoke her ancestors, producing in the process an honorific, semi-oval bwiiti reliquary figure, that was wrapped in a long continuous strip of white bias tape.14 Typically, the BaKota traditionally produced two distinct types of metal-covered reliquary guardian figures of which, the one chosen by Montgomery is known as bwiiti. Anxious to reconnect to an ancestral African heritage, yet needing to assert her American experience and difference, she constructed her bwiiti with fabric strips rather than with metal wires as do the BaKota and the Fang of Gabon (figs. 1c). In substituting cloth for metal strips, even though as a metal smith she could easily have produced a metal object, Montgomery reinterprets the iconography of this ancient sculptural form. She translates the concept into a new American environment, yet preserving its underlying Kota philosophy. Aesthetically, the use of white cloth visually conveys a haunting sepulchral quality that conceptually identifies Spirit Mother as an icon of purification. Although dealing with corporeal death and the transmutability of life, the white colour of Montgomery's bwiiti does not signify the cessation of life. Created as an essential part of a rite of transition, it speaks profoundly to death or transmutation of an old self - an old life, a broken marriage, loss of a family, and the corporeal death of a mother. At the same time, it speaks eloquently about the resurrection of a newly purified self, of a phoenix rising from the ashes. The white feathers, sprouting at the apex of Spirit Mother, references ugbene ugo (eagle feathers) which Igbos of Nigeria and Native Americans treat as a symbol of spiritual triumph and validation (fig. 1b). Thus, in signifying the successful completion of a rite of passage, Spirit Mother culturally links the indigenous cultures of Africa and the Americas in a sacred tribute to the centrality of mothers in life. While reflecting the idea of personal identity similar to, and inherent in, ikenga (Nigeria), a conceptually related object of self-validation, Montgomery synthesizes a range of cultural beliefs into Spirit Mother, and still preserves the essential BaKota idea of afterlife resurrection. Fusing all facets of her past and present identities, she placed seven beaded hearts in the central stem of her white bwiiti, a form whose extreme departure from naturalistic representation appealed to her inner sense of being, just as Leon Siroto claims, it had influenced the Cubists (1968). Drawing on the bwiiti's symbolic relationship to ancestors, and the sheer force of its iconic power, Montgomery used the seven beaded hearts to honor the seven daughters her biological mother bore; six sisters she never met. Six women she had to validate before, she the last, can truly come into her own. In this rite of assuaging the spirit guide that surrounds her and of recreating a new identity in the context of contemporary American life, the layer upon layer of white fabric strips overlay the inner semi-oval core of the bwiiti, and form evenly-spaced parallel lines that invoke the process of identity formation. Year after year, her past experiences had built up a residual core that fashioned the identity of the woman who today is known as Evangeline Juliet Montgomery. At another level, the continuous strip of white fabric that overlays this core parallels the lifeline of her experiences, and invokes the central life-line of her destiny. The wrapping, winding process employed in fashioning the fiber sculpture, re-choreographs the long winding line of personal experiences that wraps itself into a personality-schema. Linking her biological mother to the woman who had been her mother (by adoption), and whose death she was then mourning, Montgomery recollected and drew together all the loose uncommemorated strands in her life, in a rite of validation. She fused her present with her past to usher in the future, in a rite that neutralizes the negative power of past experiences and sublimates it for good. Additionally, the functional character of this Pan African conception of art is optimally rescued by Montgomery as she consciously uses her creations to come to terms with the emotion and grief accompanying the loss of a loved one. Re-creating an altar in impersonal exhibition spaces transforms the environment, and highlights her relationship to the multiple fragments of her life as she deals with traumatic experiences. Mindful that a bwiiti is not a direct representation of a deceased but rather an abstract visualization of the spirit of the dead, Montgomery's translation of the concept into a museum environment constitutes an extension of the old into the new. It marks a coping strategy that had once helped others to overcome cultural alienation. Although bwiiti figures are usually kept in special enclosures where they guard the bones of the ancestors, Montgomery's Spirit Mother publicly emerged in installations to rechoreograph the relationship envisioned by the BaKota at the 1992 exhibition, Celebrating African Art: Politics of Icons of Representation in Toronto, and in 1997 at the Life After Life exhibition in Washington, D.C. In each occasion the sculpture solemnly stands as a powerful memorial, guarding Montgomery's metal mojo and ancestral boxes in much the same way these figures historically guarded the mojo baskets and vessels bearing the bones of the BaKota ancestors. Before embracing the African side of her ancestry in her art, before coming to this deeper psychological understanding of the role and power of art, Montgomery could be described as a typical American artist, whose consciousness was steeped in an impersonal ideology of doing her "thing in metals and enameling, with other crafts and photography running a hot second" (Black Artists, 1969, 86). At this period, prior to the Black aesthetic movement, her inspiration came essentially from nature first and second from the twisted rubble and discarded forms left by humans against the beautiful forms of nature. She used materials in the state they are found, and created jewelry of stunning angularity. Meticulously smoothened, the earrings and pendants were effectively topped off with either pearls or gold tear drops. As she gained deeper knowledge of the significance and essence of art, Montgomery connected her cultural identity with her art and began to create cast metal mojo boxes that are symbolically-functional rather than decorative. Made of richly textured cast sterling silver or cast bronze surfaces, the two-inch ancestral boxes are carefully set off to perfection either with fastidiously smoothened geometric patterns, pearls, or gold tear-drops. At first glance Montgomery's work appears to establish the truth of the theory of acculturation. Created within the mainstream "white" artistic tradition, the boxes appear to have no visible African and African American traces and influences (figs. 2). They could easily "pass" as innocuous craft works with no special distinguishing cultural trait if one lacks familiarity with African American reality, and the role of mojo boxes in that scheme of things. The language and syntax of Montgomery's anamnestic art is grandly allegorical and allusionary. Shifting from personal memorials to political memorials, Montgomery deployed the two-inch mojo boxes to subvert official histories that seek to erase African American histories and identities. In preserving elements of African American history the mojo boxes took on historical significance with the growing importance of the Civil Rights movement. Ancestor Box 1, Justice for Angela was one such exquisite sterling silver box produced to preserve the memories of women's collective participation in the struggle (figs. 3). With the ever-dominant figures of high-profiled male activists like Medgar Evers, Reverend Martin Luther King, Ralph Abernathy, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, Rap Brown, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Amiri Baraka, Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, Montgomery recognized that the movement was in danger of being historically reconstructed as an all Black male movement, with Black women reduced to the subsidiary role of helpmates. Knowing that such a sexist characterization would reinforce the sort of silences that Trouillot discussed, and would be an affront to black women's activism in the struggle, she created and dedicated Ancestor Box 1, Justice for Angela to all women participants involved in the emancipatory struggle. On the political front, women like Fannie Lou Hamer, Shirley Chisholm, and Angela Davis stood firm against the force of white institutional power, maintaining an unbroken line of women's achievements from Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman to Rosa Parks. In the arts, artists like Faith Ringgold and Sonia Sanchez in the New York area, and Montgomery and Samella Lewis in California played vastly different but equally vital roles in confronting racism in art institutions. Although actively engaged in research and organizing of shows, she was unwilling to allow historical reconstruction to erase women's names or belittle their accomplishments. Slipping into her artist-identity, Montgomery resisted erasure, enacted and validated history through creating a bronze mojo boxes including, Ancestor Box 1, Justice for Angela. The latter invokes tradition, silently preserving for the next generation, the visions, voices, and memories of these warrior women. The anamnestic role of the mojo boxes transforms each sculpture into a mnemonic device and counter acculturationist thesis. Each box preserves both ancestral and personal memories that underscore the validity of another artistic legacy. Each box is full of "historical texts" to be voiced to others in narrative rites of remembrance. This idea of boxes as sites of ancestral preservation is very much a feature of African cultural life that survived in diaspora. Hence, on seeing Montgomery's boxes at an exhibition, Baba Kone, a Mende woman temporarily living in California in the early seventies, responded in spirit, and in accordance with the aesthetic principle of call and response. Heeding Montgomery's sculptural "call" of ancestral validation, she scripted the following "response" poem: ANCESTRAL BOX An artist of centuries of separation A box in due respect of her lineage A box that clearly states her heritage A box that carries through ____ her generations. A crude, or rough outside finish, A weight that tells its meanings, for in the continent of Africa Your box is linked with ceremonial sayings. To see the ancestral box in one's life, Gives the whole circle of one's existence An Ancestral box At birth At marriage At death. The ancestral box seen in all symbols, Of dusts of gold, Of brass Of silver That weighs it, but for the elders' minds Is given its full sacredness____________ In E. J. Montgomery's ancestral box. c Baba Kone, (1972). From Africa, to a sister in San Francisco. http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/nzegwu2.html |
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VISUAL CULTURE AND THE DISCONTINUITY THESIS
Throughout Western intellectual history, the relationship between Africans and those in diaspora in the Americas has consistently been portrayed as a lengthy period of fracture, and of loss of identity. The rigid idea that is vigorously defended is that Diasporic Africans have been dislocated from Africa far too long to retain any meaningful memories on which a legitimate thesis of continuity can be established.15 In a recent rebuttal of the contemporary variant of this old discontinuity thesis, Regina Perry (1982) following the pioneering lead of a long line of scholars - Jean Price-Mars (1983), Carter Woodson (1936), W. E. B. Du Bois (1939), and Melville Herskovits (1941), James Porter (1943), Cedric Dover (1960), Judith Wragg Chase (1971), and Samella Lewis (1978)16 - restated the evidence of cultural survivals in the United States. Providing further support for her views are the writings of Richard Dozier on African-based influences and innovations on American architecture (1989),17 Robert Farris Thompson (1969) on Afro-American folk art, and John Vlach (1991) on Afro-American folklife of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The works of Harold Courlander (1996), Stuckey (1994), and Gladys-Marie Fry (1991) on slave narratives, songs and folklore18 substantially contribute to a growing corpus of literature that collectively assert the continuity of African artistic practices and traditions in the diaspora. In the context of purposive human life, rites, histories, and traditions are conceptualized as dynamic, reflexive and open-ended. As Alex Haley's Roots portrays and Fry demonstrates about southern Black life in the nineteenth century, families are the nexus where traditions are thematized and lived, and where narratives facilitate anamnesis of historical legacy for people who have been barred from writing their history. Bringing cinematic light to these previously effaced spaces, Julie Dash's film, Daughters of the Dust (1992), dramatically reveals the oral, gestural and ceremonial structures of remembrance of the Gullah. While cultural transformation is expected and noticeable, uncommonly strong memories of Africa survive in the oral histories and in the adaptive rituals and words of the Sea Island communities (off the Southern coast of the United States). Other evidences of Africanisms in southern United States are the Low Country basket styles of South Carolina; the Bajan, Virginia, Georgia and Carolina Afro-pottery traditions from which Dave-the-Potter emerged; the wrought iron grills and gates of New Orleans. Important as are these identifications of Africanisms, the extent and range of recognition is handicapped by scholars' limited experiential knowledge of Africa's cultural realities, and by the conscious concealment of the significance and cultural heritage of some of these practices. Where it is possible to bring an extensive knowledge of Africa's cultural experience to an investigation of America's material culture, as has been done with the Jamaican Obeah, the Haitian Vodun, the Saramaccan Winti (Surinam), the Cuban Santería; and the Brazilian Candomblé and Macumba, and one searches with African-centered eyes, there results a proliferation of iconic forms, gestures and speech patterns, symbolisms, and geometric designs that resonate as African. Looking with African rather than Western eyes, scholars would note, as did Eugene Genovese, Nathan Irvin Huggin, Abdias do Nascimento, Michael Mullins, and Stanley Arthur, the Africanisms that are concealed in the heart of white Americas,19 including some that had previously been passed off as European-derived.20 For example, at a 1991 exhibition of Herbert Gentry's 1970-77 lithographs at Capital East Graphics, Washington D.C., I was startled by the Yorùbá-type faces of the women in Gentry's lithographs. Rendered mostly in profile, the similarity of these faces to those carved either by Lamidi Fakeye, Olowe of Ise, Bamgboye of Odo Owa, or Bamgbose of Osi Ilorin was too close to be coincidental. Visibly prominent was the typical Yorùbá stylistic treatment of bulbous eyes, rotund cheeks, flared well-defined aquiline nose, and full sharp mouth. The compositional imagery too was particularly striking. In all the works in which this Yorùbá -type female form featured, a bird was noticeably positioned nearby in the picture. The woman/bird symbolism is rich with allusions to Àjé, the most powerful, highly dreaded and revered women's cult in Yorubaland. In Yorùbá popular culture as well as in many West African societies such as Onitsha-Igbo, and among the Dogon, the night bird, is the symbol of àjé (witch, Yoruba) and amaosu (witch, Igbo).21 Increasingly looking with African eyes, one discerns in modernist art in the Americas the different geometric, zoomorphic and skeuomorphic designs of Africa which were, and are still being inscribed on the landscape. Dipping into the liturgical mysteries of the Candomblé, "Master Didi" (Deoscoredes Dos Santos) of Bahia drew from a long unbroken line of family legacy to create Òrìsà-inspired sculptures that preserves his Ketu-Yorùbá history (Walker 1984, 4-9); "Master Abdias" (Abdias do Sacramento Nobre) retranslates the centuries old Yorùbá aso oke (strip woven cloth) into the Brazilian pano da Costa (de Carvalho 1990, 22-31); and Wilfredo Lam draws extensively from Lucumi motifs and emblems in his "surrealist" art.22 The Surinamer Maroon carver, Awagi Anikil, creates intricately designed, bas-relief Saramaccan doors, drums, stools, trays and calabashes that evoke the epigramic adinkra designs of the Akan of Ghana and Ivory Coast. In the Caribbean, the vigorous sculptures and inventive copper masks of Ken Morris' captures the vitality of Afro-Caribbean culture; and Sundiata Stewart obtains spiritual influence from African sculpture which he treats as the mother of his art (Black Art 1989, 27). A construal of works of art as nuggets of history directs critical attention to the preferred stylistics and migratory patterns of artists in the Pan African world. Crossing national boundaries in cross-Atlantic emigration the Ghanaian-born, Cruzan resident painter, Nii Ahene Mettle-Nunoo, embeds kente colors and adinkra visual epigrams into the artistic landscape of the Virgin Island. Emigrating from St. Thomas in the Virgin Island to the United States is Olugebefola who draws heavily from Senufo forms, Egyptian hieroglyphics and Yorùbá metaphysics to reshape his Harlem-based art. In a reverse move, Valerie Maynard leaves New York for St. Thomas for extended periods of residency, and Jamaican-born, Kofi Kayiga, emigrates to Boston after residing in England and Uganda. His vivid abstract paintings contemporizes the allegorical symbolism of Baganda and Rastafarian metaphysics. In the United States, California resident artist, Arthur Carraway, embeds adinkra patterns and Makonde (Tanzanian) forms in the colour-saturated canvas of his Primeal and Language series. The Ethiopian-born, U.S. Resident painters, Skunder Boghassian and Acha Debela, inject Ethiopian Coptic stylistics into the American landscape. New York sculptor Mel Edwards expands his creative horizon through occasional visits to Idumuje Igboko, Nigeria; and Boston-based artist L'Mercie Frazier travels to Bahia after which she adopts the forms and colour symbolism of the Candomblé as the basis of her art. In San Francisco, Cheryle Riley etches a large Bakuba-inspired abstract design on her massive Bakuba Griffith Table; and in his early and mid-career works, Houston Conwill captured the spirit and character of Dogon cosmology in the evocative forms of his Juju Boxes. Africanized forms are also to be found in the modern art landscape of Canada. Jamaican-born Winsom creates Òrìsà-inspired art; American-born, Vancouver resident Khadejha methodically copymachines fictionalized Yorùbá forms in her painted-printed fabric drapes; and Haitian-born Canadian Roland Jean blends Vodun symbols with the icons of European art in an audacious statement of counter appropriation politics. Next, Canadian-born Jan Wade deploys the symbolism of the Santería and South Ontario Black religiosity; Trinidadian-born, Carlyle Matthew captures and intertwines the sculptural spirit of Africa and the Haidas in his blend of copper and redwood masks; and lastly Dennis Awang revitalizes stained-glass design with the stately carriages of Oya, the Yorùbá divinity of the whirlwind, and Sàngó, the Yorùbá divinity of lightening and thunder. A few months after my encounter with Gentry's work in Washington D.C, I came across the voluminous canvas drapes of Sam Gilliam, of the famed Washington colour-field school, in an exhibition catalogue. The drape painting Untitled (1970) is highly evocative of a flapping Onidan Egungun (Òyó-Yorùbá ancestral spirit known as the "owner of miracles") in the actual motion of transformation (Drewal et al. 1989, 177). Created less than three years after the 1966 First World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, Senegal in which Gilliam had participated, Dakar (1970) like Mazda (acrylic on canvas, 1990) was described by Jane Livingston, as "invok(ing) a Cardinal's robe, or the costume of the Ku Klux Klansman" (Livingston 1990). Although the shape of the drape evoked a stylized Senegalese boubou or Nigerian babanriga,23 Livingston assigned it a cultural referent that failed to consider the possibility of another cultural source given Gilliam's travel to Senegal. 24 Not only did Livingston's presumptive assignment reveal the narrow range of her evaluative scheme, it also raises critical questions about the efficacy of an interpretive framework that completely misses the African impact on American art and artists. As well, it raises the relevance of a knowledge framework that ignores the significance of the politically charged debates on art and aesthetics among African American artists and others in the Pan African world of the 1960's and 1970's. That Livingston ignored the probable influence of Africa-inspired forms on American art and African American artists of this period reveals how uninformed mainstream American is about the politics of cultural identity in African American communities.25 In the rush to prove discontinuity, and to limit the scope of the Pan African world, it is often ignored that not all Africans in the Americas arrived four hundred years ago, in the early 1520's in the United States,26 1534 in Argentina,27 1628 in Canada, 28 and 1668 in Surinam.29 Though the greatest number came between 1600 and the 1800's, they were shipped in successive waves up until the early 1800's in the United States, and the late 1880's in South America.30 The periodic shipments ensured a higher rate of retention since later arrivals replenished and revitalized the stock of Africanism. Searingly traumatic as the Middle Passage was, those who survived it were definitely scarred, but they did not loose their language and cultural values and practices. Nor did they loose their craft (weaving, goldsmithing, basketmaking, carving, or black smithing) skills which they had learned after long years of apprentice-ship.31 Mary Jackson, the renowned African American basket artist, from Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, provides evidence of this cultural continuity, even as the early Africans adapted to their new surroundings. In a telling account of the basket-making tradition in the Low Country, Jackson elaborates on the processes by which the Africans in the region revitalized and passed on their memories of ancestral Africa in an unbroken line of history: My ancestors...were fortunate to have a skill that allowed them to be kept together. The plan of the plantation owners was to separate families so they could loose their identity. Because of the valuable skill they had, [my ancestors] realized that the baskets would serve as the symbol of why and how they came. They held on to it so that generations that come would always have and keep their identity with Africa, and that that part of our history would never be repeated... They never allowed their skill to die... [They] searched the marshes and the swamps for the grasses that resemble what they used in Africa, and which we still use today... [T]hey would harvest the sweetgrass, pine needles, and bulrush and dry them in the sun. The fiber strips from the Palmetto trees are used to bind the long bunches of coiled sweetgrass, pine needles and bulrush into desired shapes.32 Unequivocally, Jackson's oral narrative recollects history and reveals that loss of skills and cultural identity did not necessarily occur with adaptation.33 Her account establishes that the production of artistic objects temporally and spatially extended people's memory and an awareness of who they really are. In the course of their harsh plantation life, ancestral memories systematically interwove with the people's immediate reality to temporally extend their cultural identities in ceremonials of production. Elaborating on this process, Jackson reveals that artistic inspiration is drawn from old traditional basket forms and facilitates the transmission of history to the younger generation. Specifically, in her own case, she meditates on the old baskets and visualizes a totally different shape emerging from that base, which she then reproduces as further extensions of the ancestral forms. This process of consciously reassembling the new in the context of the old figuratively "catches" and passes on the memory of her Old World ancestors in each new basket style created in the United States. A further testimony to the survival of memory in the context of creative production was provided by the African American artist and art historian, David Driskell, while describing the mat weaving skill of his paternal grandfather, William Driskell. Years after "acculturation" was presumed to have taken place, this displaced African, like many others in the United States, displayed the error of the thesis. They demonstrated the resilience of cultural memory by recurrently remembering and performatorily-reassembling their identity in an art-making, culture-transmitting ceremonial. In so doing William Driskell reenacted and validated his African identity that many presumed he had forgotten. According to Driskell his grandfather: made mat for the table from what we called the poplar tree bark...(which we also) refer to as the tulip tree...His process of making was to take the bark from the tulip tree and strip it all the way up, around the entire tree. The tree would die, and the wood was used for other things. He took the bark to the brook and dammed up a space about twenty feet long. He put the bark into the brook and let it stay twenty-one days. Then he took the bark out and separated it like sheets of paper. He would weave this into a five-braid weave, and that is how he (also) made ornamental decorations for the horses. He dyed the bark with earth stuffs like kaolin, red clay, and other things. When I went to Africa for the first time in the late 1960's, I travelled to Ghana and there I saw old men sitting under trees braiding a fiber from trees. They told me they were making objects that would be used as mats (1993, 15-21). The problem with the acculturation thesis is that it assumes a unidirectional path of change: Africans are represented as having lost their identity through assimilation into the dominant culture, never of having retained their own culture or of reshaping the dominant culture to adapt to their cultural mannerisms. Although memories of pre-twentieth century Africa survived in syncretized forms in the social practices of formerly enslaved Africans in the United States, sometimes survivals rather than syncretism was the primary outcome of adaptation. Though it is important to focus on the history of dispersal through enslavement, it is also crucial to emphasize the new migratory trends of the twentieth century that is rapidly diversifying and Africanizing the older African American population. The new cultural formations that are developing in the United States as a result of interaction with contemporary Africa have most radically undermined the legitimacy of the discontinuity thesis. These last waves of Africans to the Americas are largely immigrants of solid educational background and professional accomplishment with extensive and extended family ties in the different nations of Africa. "American Africans," a term coined by the eminent Kenyan scholar, Ali A. Mazuri, to describe this group of immigrants, are injecting their names, religion, values, languages, cultural practices and philosophies into the metropolitan environment of New York, Miami, Washington D.C, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Boston, and Los Angeles. With a steady stream of migration from Africa and the Caribbean to the United States, and with African Americans increasingly traveling to Africa, Europe, the Caribbean and South America, a clearly identifiable African geo-cultural zone has emerged all around the perimeter of the Atlantic Ocean. The existence of these multi-directional, multinational lines of interactions establishes that the discourse of Africanism no longer depends exclusively on the old arguments of pre-twentieth century contact. An exploration of the works of Olugebefola and Okediji will take place against this migratory context of transnational cultural practices that is reshaping and diversifying the African American population. The conscious reconstruction of self-identity reveals how historical preservation occurs through art. Ijele: Art eJournal of the African World (2000) |
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ADEMOLA OLUGEBEFOLA: themes from an ancient song Originally from the Caribbean, Olugebefola is an African American artist whose work underscores African histories, culture, religion and symbolisms (fig. 4)http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/images1.2/nzeg/index.htm#9. These orientations came about as a result of migration, lectures and publications on the Pan African world, and participation in Òrìsà Temples. Four years after his birth in 1941 in St. Thomas in the Virgin Island, his family moved to New York City where his interest in the arts was nurtured in the vibrant art community of Harlem . The major visual artists' of the times were Norman Lewis, Roy De Carava, Charles Alston, Bob Blackburn, Ernest Crichlow, Selma Burke and Jacob Lawrence. Olugebefola studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology, and worked briefly in the industry after the completion of his studies. He played bass professionally for five years, and later joined Pomusiart Inc, a research organization which promotes the idea that visual art is a vital part of poetry and music. "Jazz art," the name of this fusion of poetry-music-art fusion is described as visual sound. Exemplars of this style are Olugebefola's painting Blues for Nat Turner Suite (1966), the ink drawings Music and Motion (1975) and Jammin' At the Grinnell (1982), and the woodcut Sweet Echoes of Monk, Miles, Max and Paul (1980)http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/images1.2/nzeg/olu.htm. Living in New York, as a visual artist, jazz musician, fashion and set designer, Olugebefola established fruitful working relations with literary artists Sonia Sanchez, Ed Bullins, and Amiri Baraka; sculptor Otto Neals, painters Bill Howell, Abdul Rahman, and Jim Sepyo. In the late sixties, at the height of the Civil Rights movement, he joined a group of New York based Black artists and established the Weusi Artists Cooperative of Harlem in 1965. He became the spokesperson of Weusi (Swahili for 'blackness'), and in 1967, the cooperative opened the Nyumba Ya Sanaa (Swahili for "house of art") gallery to exhibit the works of Black artists, who at this time were still shut out of the publicly funded art institutions. Negroes - as African Americans were then called - demanded social justice, and through sit-ins and legal challenges, successfully ushered in affirmative action programs and a new kind of political consciousness. Blacks, as they increasingly began to be called, created a lexicon of slogans that reappropriated the identity of Black Americans from racist social constructions. For a number of reasons not unconnected with the race and cultural politics of the period, Olugebefola decided that ancestral validation would become the central philosophy of his creativity, and that African iconic forms would shape his art. At a time when it was unfashionable to radically deviate from white America's normative construction of art, history and culture, Olugebefola34 boldly declared his African stance. In 1965, the symbols of his visual idiom shifted to capture the ideas of this expanding metaphysical consciousness. He painted the Monk's Dream (1965) and Shango (1969)http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/images1.2/nzeg/olu.htm to invoke the extraordinary power and energy of the Òrìsà for the African American struggle. An allegorical reference to cultural resistance and triumph, Shango is a symbol of an activated historical memory. Fusing a Senufo and a pharaonic head, Olugebefola situates a swirling atom inside the head to represent solar biological energy that is generated when African peoples recover their ancient history (Untitled). Boldly proclaiming that "we had the first civilization in the world," Olugebefola re-presents history to emphasize Africa's contribution to the world, and to underscore the commonality of the cultures of ancient Egyptian and the rest of Africa. Thus, the swirling atom in the inner head speaks to an awakened historical consciousness and the replenishable abundant energy that is available to self-conscious individuals. From 1966, Olugebefola became a member of the Yorùbá Temple in Harlem and was inducted into the Ògbóni. His search for spiritual and cultural identity proceeded under the guidance of Oladele Fann, the Òbàtálá High Priest in the Temple, who helped him resolve many metaphysical questions and conflicts. During this period of immersion in Yorùbá mystical philosophy, Olugebefola's iconography was influenced by the symbolisms of Sàngó, gèlèdé masks, and Ifá cosmological narratives, which he utilized in a coded fashion to address contemporary issues of equity and social justice in the United States. The first major exhibition of this experimentation was in 1971, at the Act of Art Gallery in West Village, New York. Olugebefola unveiled his Orionic philosophy in Reflection Orion, an exhibition of painting, prints and drawings devoted to ushering in a new order, to awaken the àse in the head (Evolution in Color, 1976, 9). Passage Through Time and the Orion Series constituted the centerpiece of the exhibition in which mask-heads and ritual forms were used to reference mystical ideas of cosmic time. From this period onwards, he deployed his art to raise the consciousness of his African American audience at two levels: the historical and the metaphysical. At the historical level, Olugebefola's visual usage of Egyptian-based forms asserts that conventional European representation of Egypt constitutes fictive history. Buttressing this intellectual position are the writings of Woodson, Du Bois, and James' that have widely exposed the Aryan plagiarism of the intellectual ideas of ancient Egypt. Since ancient Egypt is the world's oldest civilization, and since it was a relatively familiar concept in Black America's consciousness in the 1970's, Olugebefola's utilization of the symbolic forms of Egypt was less concerned with informing his community of that culture's premier status in cultural progress. His goal was to visually confront the post-Enlightenment appropriation of Egypt and the corollary construction of Greece as the seat of human intellectual tradition and the world's premier civilization. Because Olugebefola sees racism as pivotal in this fraudulent assignment of Egypt's intellectual achievement to Greece, his paintings revisit and thematize African history to disrupt racist narratives. From his perspective, Europe's imperial appropriation of the proceeds of an ancient African heritage is all too reminiscent of European Americans' imperial appropriation of the creative efforts of Africans in the United States and the Caribbean. At the more important metaphysical level, however, Olugebefola's Orionic forms capture the images he perceived in dreams and spiritual meditations, which Fann, the Òbàtálá priest, had interpreted. To bridge the ancient African traditions and his "New World" realities, Olugebefola coined the term 'Orionic' that derives from orí, the Ifa conception of inner head. In Wande Abimbola's presentation of the Ifá philosophical scheme, orí delineates the inner head that is chosen by each individual in òrun (the spirit world) preparatory to being born. Orí, the inner head, is an aspect of Orí, the Òrìsà of predestination, individuality, and free will.35 As an enigmatic concept for both choice and predestination, orí, for Olugebefola, is the appropriate representation of the concept of the solar biological energy or free will that facilitates the dispersal of negative energy. Borrowing heavily from New York-Ifá metaphysical ideas, he completes the restructuring of his identity and centers his |