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Chapter Twenty Africa Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal Wallace University of North Texas Gardner's Art through the Ages, Concise Edition by Fred Kleiner
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Chapter Twenty

Jan 26, 2016

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Africa. Gardner's Art through the Ages, Concise Edition by Fred Kleiner. Chapter Twenty. Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal Wallace University of North Texas. Africa. Dates and Places : 500BCE to present 52 nations of Africa People : - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty

Africa

Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace

Randal WallaceUniversity of North Texas

Gardner's Art through the Ages, Concise Edition by Fred Kleiner

Page 2: Chapter Twenty

AfricaDates and Places: • 500BCE to present• 52 nations of Africa

People:• Core beliefs: honoring

ancestors, worship of nature deities, divine rulership

Reliquary guardian figure (mbulu ngulu), 19th or early

20th century. Fig. 20-10.

Page 3: Chapter Twenty

AfricaThemes:• Deities • Rulers• Animals

Forms:• Conceptual and

optical• Form varies by culture WILLIE BESTER, Homage to Steve

Biko, 1992. Fig. 20-22.

Page 4: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Nok head, ca. 500 BCE–200 CE. Fig. 20-2.

Page 5: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Nok culture

• Part of full figure

• Large heads, small bodies

• Pierced eyes and mouth for cooling clay sculpture

• Women sculptors?Nok head, ca. 500 BCE–200 CE.

Fig. 20-2.

Page 6: Chapter Twenty

Africa

King, 11th to 12th century. Fig. 20-

4.

Page 7: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Ife, Yoruba culture

• Sacred king effigy

• Naturalistic rendering of likeness

• But squat proportions

• Ritual regalia

King, 11th to 12th century. Fig. 20-4.

Page 8: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Great Mosque, Djenne, 1906–1907. Fig. 20-5.

Page 9: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Djenne

• Mosque is oldest example of adobe architecture in world

• Courtyard, prayer hall

• Wooden beams project from walls, support roof

Africa

Great Mosque, Djenne, 1906–1907. Fig. 20-5.

Page 10: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Waist pendant of a Queen Mother,

ca. 1520. Fig. 20-7.

Page 11: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Benin culture

• Pendant hangs on belt

• Images of oba and his court—this is Queen Mother

• Ritual regalia

• Ivory carving

• Portuguese traders Waist pendant of a Queen Mother, ca. 1520. Fig. 20-7.

Page 12: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Altar to the Hand and Arm (ikegobo),

17th to 18th century. Fig. 20-8.

Page 13: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Benin culture

• Cast-brass royal shrine = ikegobo

• For oba

• Hierarchical composition and scale

• Emphasize head,

• Hand and arm = power Altar to the Hand and Arm

(ikegobo),17th to 18th century. Fig. 20-8.

Page 14: Chapter Twenty

Africa

MASTER OF THE SYMBOLIC EXECUTION, salt

cellar, Sapi-Portuguese, ca. 1490–1540.

Fig. 20-9.

Page 15: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Sapi culture

• Salt cellar

• Hybrid art with image of Portuguese and European patterns

• Colonial relationship

• Export item from elephant tusk MASTER OF THE SYMBOLIC

EXECUTION, salt cellar, Sapi-Portuguese, ca. 1490–1540.

Fig. 20-9.

Page 16: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Ancestral screen (nduen fobara), Kalabari Ijaw,

late 19th century. Fig. 20-1.

Page 17: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample: • Kalabari Ijaw culture• Shrine to honor

ancestors • Wood, fiber screens• Honors deceased

chief of trading company

• Hierarchy of scale and stylized forms common in African art

Ancestral screen (nduen fobara), Kalabari Ijaw, late 19th

century. Fig. 20-1.

Page 18: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Nail figure (nkisi n’kondi), ca. 1875–

1900. Fig. 20-13.

Page 19: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Kongo culture

• Kongo power figure

• Consecrated by priest

• Healing spirit or harmful force

• Invoke by touch or words

• Assist individual or community Nail figure (nkisi n’kondi), ca.

1875–1900. Fig. 20-13.

Page 20: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Seated couple, ca. 1800–1850.

Fig. 20-14.

Page 21: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Dogon culture

• Linked-man-and-woman groups typical

• Part of shrine or altar

• Primordial couple?

• Stylized figures in abstract geometry of body parts

Seated couple, ca. 1800–1850. Fig. 20-14.

Page 22: Chapter Twenty

Africa

Female mask, 20th century. Fig. 20-19.

Page 23: Chapter Twenty

AfricaExample:

• Mende culture

• Mask for fertility rituals

• Combines with dress and movement for power

• Function as mediators

• Water symbolism

• Idealized beautyFemale mask, 20th century.

Fig. 20-19.