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Most striking about the traditional societies of the Congo was their remarkable artwork: baskets, mats, pottery, copper and ironwork, and, above all, woodcarving. It would be two decades before Europeans really noticed this art. Its discovery then had a strong influence on Braque, Matisse, and Picasso -- who subsequently kept African art objects in his studio until his death. Cubism was new only for Europeans, for it was partly inspired by specific pieces of African art, some of them from the Pende and Songye peoples, who live in the basin of the Kasai River, one of the Congo's major tributaries. It was easy to see the distinctive brilliance that so entranced Picasso and his colleagues at their first encounter with this art at an exhibit in Paris in 1907. In these central African sculptures some body parts are exaggerated, some shrunken; eyes project, cheeks sink, mouths disappear, torsos become elongated; eye sockets expand to cover almost the entire face; the human face and figure are broken apart and formed again in new ways and proportions that had previously lain beyond sight of traditional European realism. The art sprang from cultures that had, among other things, a looser sense than Islam or Christianity of the boundaries between our world and the next, as well as those between the world of humans and the world of beasts. Among the Bolia people of the Congo, for example, a king was chosen by a council of elders; by ancestors, who appeared to him in a dream; and finally by wild animals, who signaled their assent by roaring during a night when the royal candidate was left at a particular spot in the rain forest. Perhaps it was the fluidity of these boundaries that granted central Africa's artists a freedom those in Europe had not yet discovered.


Adam Hochschild


#art #congo #europe #art



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Did you know about Adam Hochschild?

External links
Terry Gross of NPR's Fresh Air talks to Hochschild about To End All Wars
Interview about the craft of writing with the Columbia Journal
C-SPAN recording of a speech to the National Council on Public History
Video conversation with Hochschild about King Leopold's Ghost
Book excerpts:
An excerpt from Bury the Chains
New edition afterword from King Leopold’s Ghost
Articles:
reporting from eastern Congo New York Review of Books August 2009
from Mother Jones
on narrative writing starting on p. As a college student he spent a summer working on an anti-government newspaper in South Africa and subsequently worked briefly as a civil rights worker in Mississippi in 1964. In the mid-1970s he was one of the co-founders of Mother Jones.

Adam Hochschild (born 1942) is an American author journalist and lecturer. His well-known works include King Leopold's Ghost To End All Wars Bury the Chains The Mirror at Midnight and The Unquiet Ghost.

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