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- <text id=89TT0805>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: Africa's Artistic Resurrection
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 76
- Africa's Artistic Resurrection
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Amid poverty and starvation, Christian faith and native talent
- are inspiring a wealth of religious works
- </p>
- <p> Africa is a continent crucified by famine and war,
- pestilence and poverty. For Christianity, however, it is a
- continent of resurrection. Even as older churches in Europe and
- the U.S. are emptying, faith is thriving in the sprawling lands
- south of the Sahara. As is so often the case, spiritual strength
- is inspiring -- and being inspired by -- an outpouring of
- artistic creation. "We are on the verge of a golden age in
- African Christian art," proclaims Jesuit Father Engelbert Mveng
- of Cameroon. "The movement cannot be stopped, and it is bursting
- out in flower all over Africa."
- </p>
- <p> Not since Europe's Renaissance has such a large and varied
- body of living Christian art been produced. In inaccessible
- rural workshops, thatched-roof villages and teeming urban slums,
- a firmament of fine artists inspired by Christian themes is
- emerging from within a much larger community of folk artisans.
- The movement is thriving in spite of serious obstacles. Most
- artists lack patrons, lucrative markets and substantial
- schooling. With tools, paint and canvas in chronically short
- supply, Africans work with whatever materials are handy. Wood
- is thus the most popular medium. If stained glass is too costly,
- colored resin is applied to windowpanes. If sculptors lack
- marble, they mix cheap pebbles and concrete. If budgets keep
- church buildings modest, they are brightened with imaginative
- decorations and vibrant vestments.
- </p>
- <p> Styles range from garishly colored representational
- paintings to serene abstracts. The themes are the same ones that
- inspired a thousand Renaissance masterpieces: the Nativity,
- Madonna and Child, and gripping Bible stories. The most frequent
- subject is Christ's agony on the Cross, a visual testament to
- the Africans' own suffering. But Zairian Catholic sculptor
- Ndombasi Wuma, like many Protestants, refuses to depict the
- Crucifixion. Says he: "I believe in the risen Christ. Why should
- Christ be anguished?"
- </p>
- <p> African art is created not for museums or living rooms but
- for the community. Its function is fourfold, says Elimo Njau,
- a Tanzanian Lutheran painter. Art "makes Christianity African,"
- provides a new context for worship, stimulates devotion and
- teaches the meaning of the Bible through imagery. Many works are
- signed collectively; others are anonymous. At Sims Chapel,
- Zaire's oldest Baptist church, even Sunday school children
- played their part: their rude drawings provided the basis for
- the chapel's stained-glass windows.
- </p>
- <p> Before the missionary era, the only Christianized black
- nation was Ethiopia, whose austere art style remained largely
- unchanged since the Middle Ages. When the first missionaries
- arrived in other parts of Africa in the 15th century, they
- sought to stamp out tribal religions and with them idols,
- ceremonial masks and ancestral images. The artistic tug-of-war
- intensified during the 19th century as the number of Christian
- missions mushroomed.
- </p>
- <p> The latter-day art boom was fostered by Roman Catholic
- missionaries. Among them were Brother Marc-Stanislas Wallenda
- from Belgium, who founded Kinshasa's Academy of Fine Arts in
- 1943, and Father Kevin Carroll of Ireland, who in the same era
- came to work among Nigerian craftsmen. Most white missionary
- bishops back then, Carroll recalls, "thought we were wasting
- time." Political independence and the increase of black clergy
- accelerated the process that European Christians call adaptation
- or inculturation, meaning the incorporation of local culture
- into Christianity. Today Nigeria has Africa's largest corps of
- artists and artisans, and Zaire probably boasts the most
- important assemblage of sheer talent.
- </p>
- <p> Inculturation often means nothing more controversial than
- transplanting the classic Bible stories into black-African
- settings. A white policeman accompanies Jesus to Calvary. The
- crucified Christ wears a crown of cactus thorns. The three Wise
- Men bear gifts of kola nuts and chickens. More saucily, South
- African linocut artist John Muafangejo shows Satan urinating in
- fear before an angel. Sometimes even modest experiments produce
- scandal. Cheap reproductions hang beneath the Stations of the
- Cross carved by Kanutu Chenge for a Catholic church near
- Lubumbashi, Zaire. They are there to appease a congregation
- shocked to see Pilate dressed as an African chieftain and women
- with tribal headbands witnessing the Crucifixion.
- </p>
- <p> Serious theological problems can arise when Africanization
- uses symbols and myths from the pre-Christian faiths. Fearing
- syncretism in a continent where communion with the spirits and
- ancestors remains a powerful belief, most Protestants are
- exceedingly cautious about all the visual arts. Zaire's
- indigenous Kimbanguist Church strictly forbids decoration except
- on preachers' and singers' robes. But many Anglicans, once
- hesitant, are enthusiasts for the new church art. Methodist
- theologian Dkalimbo Kajoba encourages art so long as it is for
- "decoration," not "adoration."
- </p>
- <p> Since the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), Roman
- Catholicism has shown the most readiness to embrace
- Africanization. One of the boldest steps came in 1967, when the
- newly built St. Paul's Church in Lagos opened its doors to
- reveal frankly pagan symbols and statues. A black Nigerian
- priest protested at the time, "You are taking us back from
- whence we came -- paganism." But prominent Nigerian artist Bruce
- Onobrakpeya notes that the Yorubas "worship God through the
- spirit Orisha, who will pray to God for them and obtain the
- blessings they desire -- not so very different from parishioners
- kneeling before a statue of the Virgin." The decorations
- remained.
- </p>
- <p> Abayomi Barber, a Nigerian who makes the sign of the cross
- over each painting he creates, sees profound value in tribal
- cultures. "The birth of a child, coming of age, marriage, death
- and the spirits of our ancestors -- all these needed to be
- illustrated and represented as supernatural manifestations. This
- is the basis of our art. We are still interlinked with nature."
- More radically, Cameroon's Father Mveng wants to fling the
- church doors wide open to fetishes and magic charms. In Africa's
- interreligious melange, Muslims are creating images for
- Christian churches that are not allowed in mosques. Animists are
- decorating Christian churches. Father Carroll's school produced,
- as well as Christian art, pillars for temples serving ancestral
- faiths.
- </p>
- <p> The most sensitive question is how to portray Jesus Christ.
- Some tribes show him with a huge head to symbolize great wisdom
- or a massive chest to convey strength. But should he be depicted
- as an African? Urban Christians are more open to this than
- believers in the bush. Commissioned by the Catholic Cathedral
- in Kananga, Zaire, Enkobo Mpane created his first Bantu Christ
- from ebony in 1969. Parishioners rejected the work, so it hangs
- in a nearby convent. "Our parishioners still think of Christ as
- a Jew and not an African," reports Arley Brown, a U.S. Baptist
- teaching in Kinshasa. But Nigerian Anglican architect Fola Alade
- insists, "If Jesus is the Son of God, how can he be just a Jew?"
- </p>
- <p> For many African artists, the act of creation itself is a
- religious experience. Zaire's Mwabila Pemba, a specialist in
- beaten copper, rises daily at 5 a.m. to pray and believes that
- as he works "I'm in the hands of a divine force." He is among
- multitudes who speak of creating through prayers, dreams and
- inspiration from the Bible. Africans know that this makes them
- oddities among the world's modern-day artists. Ben Nhlanhla
- Nsusha, who recently returned to Johannesburg after five years
- of study in London, says the young artists in England "can't
- understand the way I think. They never do religious subjects."
- </p>
- <p> Africans are anything but embarrassed about this cultural
- distinctiveness. Cecil Skotnes, one of the handful of creative
- white religious artists in South Africa, insists, "Urgency is
- the basis of all great art. This urgency is no longer apparent
- in European or U.S. art." That judgment may be too sweeping. Yet
- there is no question that African Christian art, serene and
- savage, florid and austere, stands virtually alone in the vigor
- and authenticity with which its practitioners seek to express
- the inexpressible.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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