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Magdalene Odundo | Kenya/UK

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Magdalene Odundo Source: Victorian Fortune City http://victorian.fortunecity.com/palette/722/page2.html Magdelene Odundo Magdalene Odundo was born in Nairobi, Kenya in 1950. As a child she lived in Kenya and India. From 1968 to 71 she attended the Nairobi Polytechnic in Kenya, while there she studied Graphic Art. In 1971 she left Kenya to attend Cambridge College of Art in Cambridge, England to continue her study in Graphic Design. Odundo grew restless with this medium and experimented with various mediums. In 1973 she moved to Farnham, England to attend West Surrey College of Art and Design. At West Surrey she settled on ceramics as her medium. In that first year at West Surrey she had the opportunity to visit the Cornwall Workshop of renowned potter Bernard Leach. Leach was the father of the modern British studio ceramics movement in the 1920's. Marla Berns describes this movement, "as a tradition based on principles of simplicity and purity of form derived from Asian cer...

IngridMwangiRobertHutter | Kenya/Germany

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Body as Art | IngridMwangiRobertHutter Source: International Museum of Women http://www.imow.org/wpp/stories/viewStory?storyId=1107 "Static Drift," two-piece digital photography. Image | IngridMwangiRobertHutter *N.B. See source to watch video work. Ingrid Mwangi Speaks from the Body Many contemporary women artists use their body to make a political statement. Artist Ingrid Mwangi is one of them, creating work that is innovative, visually striking and often shocking. She spent the first 15 years of her life in Kenya and has been living in Germany ever since. Through photography, performance, sound, installation and video, she's created a "body of work" that questions both social and political conventions. Mwangi writes: My body is the only thing that I own... I react, interpret and question the clichés and stereotypes with which I am faced... I use art to awaken consciences. Body Photographs Mwangi's 2001 photo series, "Static Drift" is, literally,...

Wangechi Mutu | Kenya, USA

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Source: Michael Stevenson Gallery http://www.michaelstevenson.com/contemporary/exhibitions/distant_relatives/index.htm Wangechi Mutu Born 1972, Nairobi, Kenya Lives and works in New York, USA Born in Kenya, Wangechi Mutu attended boarding school in Wales for two years before moving to the United States. She holds a BFA from the Cooper Union in New York, and an MFA from Yale. In 2003 she was an artist in residence at the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York. Mutu’s work is included in the currently touring Africa Remix. In 2005 she held solo exhibitions at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Miami Art Museum and at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects. Group exhibitions include drawing shows at MoMA, New York, and Tate Modern, London; Greater New York 2005 at PS1, New York; Figuratively (2004) and Africaine (2002) at the Studio Museum; Looking Both Ways at the Museum for African Art, New York (2003); Black President: The Art and Legacy of Fela Anikulapo Kuti at the New Museum,...

Owusu-Ankomah | Ghana/Germany

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Source: Michael Stevenson Gallery http://www.michaelstevenson.com/contemporary/exhibitions/distant_relatives/index.htm Owusu-Ankomah Born 1956, Sekondi, Ghana Lives and works in Lilienthal, Germany Born in Ghana shortly before the country gained its independence, Owusu-Ankomah enrolled at the Ghanatta College of Art in Accra in 1971. In his twenties he started travelling to Europe, and in 1986 he permanently relocated to Lilienthal, near Bremen, Germany. Group exhibitions include the currently touring Africa Remix; the 2006 Dakar biennale; Journeys and Destinations at the National Museum of African Art, Washington, DC (2003); and A Fiction of Authenticity at the Contemporary Art Museum, St Louis (2003). He designed one of the official art posters published in conjunction with the soccer World Cup in Germany in 2006. His work was seen in South Africa in 1995 on the United Nations exhibition A Right to Hope which travelled to the Johannesburg Art Gallery. Over the past decade Owusu-Ank...

Dogon People of Mali

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I have created a slide show incorporating the blend that makes up the Dogon People's unique aesthetic. It includes architecture, tribal art, nature, pottery and Saharan sand, all of which are closely interwoven into everyday life. The Dogon are a group of people living in the central plateau region of Mali, south of the Niger bend near the city of Bandiagara in the Mopti region. They number just under 800,000. The Dogon are best known for their mythology, their mask dances, wooden sculpture and their architecture. The past century has seen significant changes in the social organization, material culture and beliefs of the Dogon, partly because Dogon country is one of Mali's major tourist attractions. Dogon art is primarily sculpture. Dogon art revolves around religious values, ideals, and freedoms. Dogon sculptures are not made to be seen publicly, and are commonly hidden from the public eye within the houses of families, sanctuaries, or kept with the Hogon. The importance o...

L'Appartement 22 | Rabat, Morocco

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Abdellah Karroum is an independent curator and art researcher, born in Morocco in 1970. Source: http://universes-in-universe.org/eng/nafas/articles/2005/l_appartement_22 (Published: November 2005, print version) L'appartement 22 Interview with Abdellah Karroum By Haupt & Binder L'appartement 22 (Apartment 22) is an experimental space for encounters, exhibitions, and artists’ residencies in Rabat, Morocco, founded in 2002 by Abdellah Karroum. Its co-operative, project-specific work methods are based on the participation of artists as well as its private and institutional partners. The curatorial work of this undertaking supports artists in the international network of contemporary art. Abdellah Karroum, the founder of L'appartement, was born in 1970 in Morocco and works as an independent curator and art expert. Pat Binder and Gerhard Haupt of Universes in Universe conducted the following E-mail interview with him: Universes in Universe: In which cultural context and in ...

Mounir Troudi | Sufi Singer, Tunisia

I have recently been struggling with the issue of Zimbabwe but I want to take a break and introduce you to some interesting music from Tunisia. When I was staying with Najet Belkhodja in Tunis recently I met up with Mounir Troudi. Here is some wonderful footage of Tunisia and life lived in North Africa. Mounir Troudi the amazing Sufi singer from Tunisia teams up with Antonio Maiello the Neopolian Folk singer with the Mediterranean Orchestra. This is a video for those that just love music. *N.B. If these links don't work please cut and paste and watch on the YouTube link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TraA0GngK4g Here is a slightly different version with images of the Mediterranean Orchestra *N.B. If these links don't work please cut and paste and watch on the YouTube link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUv90iZZFZY Hope you enjoy them as much as I do......