In his most recent book, Nobel laureate, poet, essayist, and political activist Wole Soyinka offers a personal and poetic look at the politics and aesthetics of collecting. As a longtime art collector, Soyinka argues—usually passionately so—for the power of collecting as a vehicle for reclamation of Yoruba tradition and against dogmatic colonial and religious cultural cleansing. Beyond Aesthetics was developed and expanded from a three-part series of Richard D. Cohen Lectures delivered by the author at Harvard University in 2017. Of likely interest to art historians, the lectures were delivered concurrently with an exhibition at the Cooper Gallery of African and African American Art, which included objects from author's personal collection as well as the contemporary work of Nigerian artists Peju Alatise and Moyo Okedeji, among others. Following the lecture format, the book is split into three chapters: “Oga, Na Original Fake, I Swear!”; “Procreative Deities: The Orisa's Triumphal March”;...
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Autumn 2021
August 03 2021
Beyond Aesthetics: Use, Abuse, and Dissonance in African Traditions
Beyond Aesthetics: Use, Abuse, and Dissonance in African Traditions
byWole
&Soyinka
,New Haven, CT
: Yale University Press in association with the Hutchins Center for African & African American Art, Harvard University
.160 pp., 11 b/w illus., $25, hardcover
Jenny S. Martel
Jenny S. Martel
Jenny S. Martel is an independent scholar and EdD candidate at the University of St. Thomas, focusing on issues of race, ethnicity, and aesthetics in higher education curriculum. She holds an MA in art history from the University of St. Thomas. [email protected]
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Jenny S. Martel
Jenny S. Martel is an independent scholar and EdD candidate at the University of St. Thomas, focusing on issues of race, ethnicity, and aesthetics in higher education curriculum. She holds an MA in art history from the University of St. Thomas. [email protected]
Online ISSN: 1937-2108
Print ISSN: 0001-9933
© 2021 by the Regents of the University of California
2021
Regents of the University of California
African Arts (2021) 54 (3): 93–94.
Citation
Jenny S. Martel; Beyond Aesthetics: Use, Abuse, and Dissonance in African Traditions. African Arts 2021; 54 (3): 93–94. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/afar_r_00606
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