[Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times is an exhibition drawn from the Museum Affordances/[Re:]Entanglements project led by Paul Basu, formerly at SOAS University of London. The exhibition revisits the ethnographic archive assembled by the colonial anthropologist Northcote W. Thomas in Southern Nigeria and Sierra Leone between 1909 and 1915. The title itself plays on the ideas of the entangling of Africa and the West during the colonial period, and with a continued, renewed, and expanded process of reengagement that includes community involvement and works by artists inspired by (and critical of) the collection and its original frame of reference. A central question raised by the exhibition is whether we can see beyond the violence of the colonial period, especially now, when the Black Lives Matter movement has drawn attention to continued inequities in Western cultures as well as between world populations. The archive itself includes some 3,000 objects; at least...
[Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times curated by Paul Basu
Jean Borgatti is consulting curator of African, Oceanic, and Native American Art at the Fitchburg Art Museum and affiliated with Boston University's African Studies Center and the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Clark University. She has been a Fulbright Scholar (2002–2004, 2014–2015) and a professor in the Department of Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Benin, Nigeria (2013–2017). [email protected].
Jean Borgatti is consulting curator of African, Oceanic, and Native American Art at the Fitchburg Art Museum and affiliated with Boston University's African Studies Center and the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Clark University. She has been a Fulbright Scholar (2002–2004, 2014–2015) and a professor in the Department of Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Benin, Nigeria (2013–2017). [email protected].
Jean Borgatti; [Re:]Entanglements: Colonial Collections in Decolonial Times curated by Paul Basu. African Arts 2023; 56 (1): 82–85. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/afar_r_00699
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