Review of "the eternal face". (dialogue).In its Winter 2000 issue African Arts African arts Visual, performing, and literary arts of sub-Saharan Africa. What gives art in Africa its special character is the generally small scale of most of its traditional societies, in which one finds a bewildering variety of styles. published Professor Allen F. Roberts's extensive review of the exhibition "The Eternal Face: African Masks and Western Society" at the Afrika Museum, Berg en Dal Berg en Dal is a village in the Dutch province of Gelderland. It is located to the southeast of the city of Nijmegen. The largest part of the village lies in the municipality of Groesbeek, but a small part lies in Ubbergen. , Netherlands. As guest-curator of this exhibition, I would like to make a few comments. It is apparently because of the innovative nature of the exhibition, which needs some clarification, that Professor Roberts quotes at length my own elucidations concerning the relationship between the form and content of the exhibition design. I am very grateful for that. Nonetheless, the exhibition would seem to cause some surprise, and it reminds the reviewer re·view·er n. One who reviews, especially one who writes critical reviews, as for a newspaper or magazine. reviewer Noun a person who writes reviews of books, films, etc. Noun 1. of "modernist installation art." This in turn has surprised me. While conceiving the exhibition, and designing it with Roel Schneemann, a modernist goal was the last thing I had in mind. My ideas are based on a thorough study of the ethnological eth·nol·o·gy n. 1. The science that analyzes and compares human cultures, as in social structure, language, religion, and technology; cultural anthropology. 2. literature with regard to African masks. It is true that, in accordance with the deliberately intercultural in·ter·cul·tur·al adj. Of, relating to, involving, or representing different cultures: an intercultural marriage; intercultural exchange in the arts. tenor of the exhibition, I extend this literature by making links with many topics that are of concern (equally) to Western culture. I have certainly made room for the African masks themselves, intending to have them "speak," albeit in a different, specifically intercultural narrative or dialogue. I wonder whether this narrative has made the African context of the masks disappear or whether it has revealed, as was precisely my intention, unnoted dimensions and the unnoted actuality ac·tu·al·i·ty n. pl. ac·tu·al·i·ties 1. The state or fact of being actual; reality. See Synonyms at existence. 2. Actual conditions or facts. Often used in the plural. and expressiveness of these masks, making them come alive again--in what is indeed a somewhat unusual way--in an intercultural dialogue. By far the majority of reactions to the exhibition (mostly by people who are not trained as ethnologists) show that visitors indeed engage with the way the masks are presented; they really feel they are brought into contact with these masks. This brings us to the crucial question: Which narrative or, (post)structurally speaking, "discourse" does one apply to ethnographic eth·nog·ra·phy n. The branch of anthropology that deals with the scientific description of specific human cultures. eth·nog objects? This question is preeminently pre·em·i·nent or pre-em·i·nent adj. Superior to or notable above all others; outstanding. See Synonyms at dominant, noted. [Middle English, from Latin prae a matter of discussion with regard to modernism modernism, in religion, a general movement in the late 19th and 20th cent. that tried to reconcile historical Christianity with the findings of modern science and philosophy. . I try to deal with this question as carefully as possible, precisely because I am quite skeptical of (post)modernist discourse-theory. In my opinion this theory, which evidently has been fruitful in many respects, results from a radicalization The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page. of the modern subject, who is often reduced to a mere narrativizing subject. As a result, all kinds of objects, including ethnographic ones, are considered to be no more than the product of the subject's narrative--a way of thinking which has gone too far. What is of utmost concern to me, precisely in relation to African masks, is the question What have African masks to say to us? rather than Just what have we to say about African masks? In my view, the (post)modernist perspective has made us preoccupied with our role as interpreters, which has perhaps resulted in our neglect of the impact which the ethnographic "object" has on us and on our interpretation. What are the (acceptable) conditions for perceiving ethnographic objects? Is it (scholarly) unacceptable to become inspired by these objects--as happened to me while preparing the exhibition--in view of questions concerning Western culture? The more you think about these questions, the more difficult it is to find answers. Still, I think it is necessary to ask them, in order for the rich and perhaps infinite meaning of ethnographic objects to be tapped or reformulated again and again, and be given a chance in an intercultural context. While rediscussing in this manner the "essence" of African masks, in this exhibition I have tried to break open familiar discourses (including ethnographical eth·nog·ra·phy n. The branch of anthropology that deals with the scientific description of specific human cultures. eth·nog ones) about these masks. Maybe this goal has resulted, unintentionally, in a thoroughly modernist narrative, as the review suggests--but then again, maybe not. Anyway, I am very pleased that my exhibition has raised many questions, and that the review in African Arts will contribute to raising still others. Ulrike Weinhold University of Nijmegen Afrika Museum, Berg en Dal The Netherlands |
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