(top) Yvonne Osei, “Between the Voids,” diptych video still, 2012 COURTESY THE ARTIST (middle) Kibrom Araya, “Self-Portrait,” 2021, gouache on paper COURTESY THE ARTIST (bottom) Elshafei Dafalla, “Delirium,” 2005, prints on canvas. COLLECTION OF THE ARTIST An exploration of cultural and artistic impacts of the African diaspora
Relocation, resettling and
assimilation are components of the African diasporic experience that
have significantly impacted the artists in “States of Becoming,” an
exhibition of contemporary African artists at the McMullen Museum of Art
at Boston College.
Curated
by Fitsum Shebeshe and produced by Independent Curators International
(ICI), the exhibition displays work by 17 artists who have migrated from
different regions of Africa to the United States. The show explores how
that resettlement has impacted the artists’ work and their sense of
identity.
“Although
practicing in a wide variety of mediums, these artists are united in the
important questions their works probe about the role of relocation in
reimagining hybrid identities and a sense of belonging,” says Nancy
Netzer, inaugural Robert L. and Judith T. Winston director of the
McMullen Museum of Art and a Boston College professor of art history.
“Such questions are fundamental to the liberal arts education at Boston
College and, especially, to the pedagogy and research of our faculty in
African and African Diaspora Studies,” she said.
The
exhibition features artists Chukwudumebi Gabriel Amadi-Emina, Kearra
Amaya Gopee, Kibrom Araya, Nadia Ayari, Vamba Bility, Elshafei Dafalla,
Masimba Hwati, Chido Johnson, Miatta Kawinzi, Dora King, Helina
Metaferia, Nontsikelelo Mutiti, Yvonne Osei, Kern Samuel, Amare Selfu,
Tariku Shiferaw and Yacine Tilala Fall.
Working
in a variety of media, the artists came from 12 different countries in
Africa and one in the Caribbean, spanning from Ethiopa, Ghana and Kenya
to Trinidad, Senegal and Sierra Leone.
Three
groupings organize the exhibition. One illustrates how the artists’
works changed aesthetically due to their relocation, one shows how
artists have brought elements of their home culture to their new country
and the third displays ways in which the artists have merged influences
from both their identities.
“The
artists’ approach this phenomenon by engaging across multiple subjects
including history, sociology, politics, visual and performing arts,
literature, etc.,” said Lorelle Semley, a BC professor of history and
director of the college’s African and African Diaspora Studies Programs.
“Similarly, African diaspora studies puts different disciplines into
dialogue, often through the creative use of materials and methods.”
Curator
Shebeshe came to Baltimore, Maryland, in 2016 by way of Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia’s capital and largest city. He hopes the exhibition appeals to
those who have experienced the torn feeling of relocation and opens the
eyes of those who haven’t experienced how the diaspora creates multiple
identities and perspectives.
“This
exhibition allows for further understanding of not only my own
experiences, but those of the artists,” said Shebeshe. “By analyzing
both the unique aspects and commonalities…we can reimagine together how
we think identity is continually shaped and reshaped.”
On the web
mcmullenmuseum.bc.edu/exhibitions/states