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The more things change ...


I really don't think things have changed as much as we might fear. Africanists have always been more interested in exploring new and undiscovered intellectual terrain than have scholars and students in other disciplines or areas of art history. When Roy Sieber wrote his dissertation dis·ser·ta·tion  
n.
A lengthy, formal treatise, especially one written by a candidate for the doctoral degree at a university; a thesis.


dissertation
Noun

1.
 here at Iowa in 1957, the chair of the department, Lester Longman, agreed to read it on the grounds that while he might not know much about African art African art, art created by the peoples south of the Sahara.

The predominant art forms are masks and figures, which were generally used in religious ceremonies.
, he could recognize a good dissertation. Roy Sieber knew far less than I did about the Mossi Mossi (mŏs`ē), African people, numbering about 2.5 million, mostly in Burkina Faso. From c.A.D. 1000 the Mossi were organized into several kingdoms, one of which has continued to the present day.  of Burkina Faso Burkina Faso (burkē`nə fä`sō), republic (2005 est. pop. 13,925,000), 105,869 sq mi (274,200 sq km), W Africa. It borders on Mali in the west and north, on Niger in the northeast, on Benin in the southeast, and on Togo, Ghana, and  when I defended my dissertation in 1979. Barbara Thompson Barbara Thompson is the name of
  • Barbara Thompson (Mormon), American leader in the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints;
  • Barbara Thompson (musician), English jazz saxophonist, flutist and composer.
 knows much more about art and healing among the Shambaa of Tanzania than I do, yet I had no hesitation about directing her dissertation.

Students must spend the first year or two of their graduate study learning the basics of African art. They must be able to tell the Baule from the Luba, even if they intend to study contemporary women's art in urban Mozambique. They must understand the importance of art in social context and the themes and issues we all cover in our classes. They had better be prepared to prove they know about Kongo minkisi and Yoruba gelede when they take their comprehensive exams, or they won't get to do Ph.D. research. They must learn these ideas because they will need to teach them, and because some of them may work as museum curators and will have to deal with objects and make real judgments about identification and quality. (Manuel Jordan commented to me that his training in "connoisseurship" at Iowa proved to be essential to his work as curator CURATOR, persons, contracts. One who has been legally appointed to take care of the interests of one who, on account of his youth, or defect of his understanding, or for some other cause, is unable to attend to them himself.
     2.
 at the Birmingham Museum of Art Coordinates:

The Birmingham Museum of Art is an important regional public art museum, located at 2000 Eighth Ave. North in downtown Birmingham, Alabama.
.) Having demonstrated at the M.A. level that they understand the most important and fundamental issues, they can then go on to the Ph.D. level and explore new territory.

It is quite clear that students are less interested in following in their teachers' footsteps than they are in discovering a new and important problem that no one has studied before. This is natural. In twenty-two years only three of my students have done research in Burkina Faso, my own area of specialization A career option pursued by some attorneys that entails the acquisition of detailed knowledge of, and proficiency in, a particular area of law.

As the law in the United States becomes increasingly complex and covers a greater number of subjects, more and more attorneys are
, while seven have worked in Nigeria, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ghana, and Cuba. I learn a lot from the work my students do in the field, and that makes me a better teacher and scholar. I try to keep ahead of them as long as I can by reading what they read (Sidney Kasfir's recent book, Contemporary African Art, has been very helpful in this regard), but eventually they pass me. This too is natural. I may not know much about the Lozi, but I know a good dissertation when I see it. I would not want to produce a string of clones of myself. I do admit that I sometimes mourn mourn  
v. mourned, mourn·ing, mourns

v.intr.
1. To feel or express grief or sorrow. See Synonyms at grieve.

2.
 the lack of interest of many students in objects that are visually powerful and beautiful and have an affective affective /af·fec·tive/ (ah-fek´tiv) pertaining to affect.

af·fec·tive
adj.
1. Concerned with or arousing feelings or emotions; emotional.

2.
 presence, but I get over it quickly and carry on.

Biennales and art cooperatives are not that foreign to me. When I was a Peace Corps volunteer, my first job in Africa, in 1970-72, was as director of the National Art Center in Ouagadougou. We (five PCVs) taught our students how to make beautiful batiks--and how pleased I was a few years ago when a group of African students at Iowa organized an exhibition of "traditional" art from their home countries, and the students from Burkina Faso displayed batiks!

Last, we now have Sarah Adams teaching at Iowa, whose interest is in uli body art among the Igbo and in contemporary African art, so if students get bored with my masks from Burkina Faso or objects from East Africa that were my focus in Kilengi (1998), they can study with Sarah. I see no problem.
Christopher D. Roy
School of Art and Art History
The University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
COPYRIGHT 2001 The Regents of the University of California
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Roy, Christopher D.
Publication:African Arts
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 22, 2001
Words:657
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