


Sherrie Levine, ‘African Masks after Walker Evans’ (2015)
In 1979, Sherrie Levine received widespread acclaim for her series ‘After Walker Evans’, in which she re-photographed 24 of Walker Evans’s photographs out of an exhibition catalogue, depicting the impoverished rural population in Alabama at the end of the 1920s. 35 years later, in a further series after Walker Evans, Levine addresses similar issues with new layers of relevance.
For the series ‘African Masks after Walker Evans’, the artist chose her motifs from an extensive collection of over 400 photographs of African artworks that Walker Evans was commissioned to produce in 1935 by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Evans photographed numerous objects from “African Negro Art,” a major exhibition shown in 1935 at the Museum of Modern Art and other American museums. These photographs were not used for the exhibition catalogue, but were compiled into a portfolio of more than 400 original prints, provided to museums and specialized libraries for educational purposes. This comprehensive project made a significant contribution to the reception of African art in the western aesthetic canon.
Selecting only masks for her series, Sherrie Levine hones in on the question of the identity of the artwork creator. Walker Evans’s photographs already indicate the aesthetic primacy of the works he depicted: through the act of being photographed, they are transformed in status from foreign ritual artifacts into modern sculptures.
By mh
|
Posted in Composition
|
Also tagged action, America, appropriation, black, collection, culture, DIY, education, exoticism, image, photographs, portfolio, primitive, repurposing, sculpture, Sherrie Levine, translation, unknown, USA, walker evans, white
|

Phyllis Galembo, ‘Kambulo and Kapada (They Start the Dance), Makishi Masquerade, Kaoma, Zambia’ (2007)
By mh
|
Posted in Composition
|
Also tagged action, african, anonymity, anonymous, clothing, collection, costume, dance, DIY, eyes, folklore, forehead, found, fuckem, kambulo, kapada, makishi, masquerade, mouth, painting, performance, phyllis galembo, public space, ritual, romance, sculpture, start, the wild, traditional, tribal, unknown, zambia
|

‘Dr. Nibo’ (2013)

‘Ma Poule’ (2013)

‘Petit Wax’ (2013)
All works by Romuald Hazoumè
By mh
|
Posted in Composition
|
Also tagged african, benin, collection, culture, DIY, faces, found, found materials, fuckem, fun, Romuald Hazoumè, sculpture, the wild, trash, tribal, unknown, voodoo
|



Masks (2010-ongoing) by Bertjan Pot
By mh
|
Posted in Abstraction
|
Also tagged action, Art, bertjan pot, collection, design, DIY, dutch, experiment, expression, faces, folklore, freestyle, fuckem, fun, joke, leftover, light, material, rope, rotterdam, sculpture, studio, textile, the wild, tribal, unknown, yarn
|


In Romania, the ceremonial of the symbolic renewal of the calendar year at the turn of the year, the night between December 31 and January 1, is called the Burial of the Old Year or, more recently, New Year’s Eve.
On New Year’s Eve, when evening falls, there appear ‘the disguised ones’. In some villages in Bucovina (northeastern Romania), ‘the disguised ones’ are said to walk through the fog. They bear masks that help them personify wolves, goats, little horses, stags, the beauties of the New Year, devils, bear leaders etc. As soon as the evening falls, the large group divides into small groups that go wassailing from door to door, till dawn, when the New Year is finally installed.
By mh
|
Posted in Abstraction
|
Also tagged action, animals, bears, burial, collection, devils, disguised, DIY, fog, found, fuckem, goats, horses, new year, old year, people, performance, personification, romance, romania, stags, the wild, tradition, trash, unknown, walking, wassailing, wolves
|





Installation view of ‘Between the worlds’ (2011) by Matthew Ronay
By mh
|
Posted in Abstraction
|
Also tagged action, DIY, environment, folk, installation, matthew ronay, mysticism, sculpture, the wild, totems, tribal, weird
|