Masela Nkolo: Safari | In Collaboration with Lauren Tate Baeza

6 October - 2 December 2023
  • Johnson Lowe Gallery is pleased to present Masela Nkolo: Safari as part of our current exhibition In Unity, as in Division.
     
    Masela Nkolo's syncretic pieces blend traditional and contemporary African elements, drawing inspiration from his Congolese heritage. He transforms materials like oil lanterns and screwdrivers into sculptures that represent the historical and contemporary identity of Congo. His work aims to manifest ancestral characteristics, celebrating African pride and resilience.
     
    Safari is accompanied by a three-question interview between Masela Nkolo and Lauren Tate Baeza, the Fred and Rita Richland Curator of African Art at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia.
  • Masela Nkolo
    Mukanda Mask 01, 2023
    Galvanized steel, lantens, screwdrivers, epoxy, door springs, skimmers, wax, acrylic and foam
    24 x 14 x 13 inches
  • Lauren Tate Baeza: As an artist, you not only reference visual expressions found among various groups of the Congo. You also draw inspiration from the aesthetic traditions of the Baoulé of Côte d'Ivoire and Edo people of Benin, Nigeria. What aspects of Baulé and Benin visual culture most appeal to you? And how do you apply these elements in your practice? 

     

    Masela Nkolo: Baoulé, Edo Benin, and I’m going to include Kuba art as well, appeal to me because these three ethnic groups’ artworks focus on human figure depictions and are linked to their spirituality. Their attractiveness is within their style and aesthetic intelligence in metalwork, weaving, and embroidery. Renowned for their high degree of refinement, their artistic corpus is composed mainly of masks and statues. And with their great sense of stylization and detail, these sculptors created some of the most elegant pieces of African classical art.

     

    Each of these groups have a specific element that makes them distinct that I incorporate into my works; for example, the Kuba use of fabric and symbols, Baoulé facial expressions, and Benin facial structure and form. And, though my works are created from metal, they are a combination of ideas from the Baoulé and Benin use of bronze and wood. Lastly, the three groups' artworks produce a particular energy that I connected to and wanted to portray.

  • Lauren Tate Baeza: You speak of syncretizing Western contemporary art with African design tradition. Artists in Africa have done this for generations, of course. In the late colonial and early post-colonial period, for example, Nigerian artist and philosopher Uche Okeke (1933-2016) and the Zaria Art Society deemed this approach natural synthesis, defining it as combining local visual languages and traditions with select foreign artistic sensibilities to produce an interplay of styles which reclaim indigenous aesthetic values without discarding Western influence.

     

    What is implied in this approach? Why do you find this method of intentionally and simultaneously referencing Western art modalities and those indigenous to West and Central Africa to be most appropriate in locating your individual expression and artistic voice? 

     

    Masela Nkolo: Firstly, I would like to say that I agree with the artist and philosopher Uche Okeke. Secondly, I think when creating contemporary artwork, we have to understand and accept others. Beauty is found in diversity, and we are in a time where beauty isn't based on skin color. Western and African art are no longer for themselves, but now belong to the world. So why do I have to ignore or refuse something because it's from another world or culture? Why can’t African and Western art inspire each other? These are questions I ask myself. My response to these questions is found in my utilization of everyday random Western items, such as screwdrivers, stovetop covers, and kitchen utensils transformed into artwork displaying traditional African influences. Also, being an artist of globalization and living between continents puts me in the position as an intermediary between two opposing realities. Human beings are not self-sufficient, we always complement each other, and cultural exchange is inevitable when one culture meets another.

  • Lauren Tate Baeza: Late President Mobutu Sese Seko’s Return to Authenticity initiative was crafted to dissolve Belgian colonial influence in Congo. Considering both the impact of architecture and cultural hybridity in your practice, what are your thoughts on the aspirations of post-colonial building design developed by Congolese architects (and their European collaborators, such as Italian architect Eugène Palumbo) in this period? Are indigeneity and modernity reconcilable? Is authenticity compatible with ideas such as natural synthesis?

     

    Masela Nkolo: President Mobutu understood that in architecture, the most important structural element is its foundation. In a society that had lost its foundations due to colonialism, he understood we had to construct a foundation based on our own identity and to become our own inspiration. I would say that with President Mobutu’s Return to Authenticity initiative there was a vision to honor and develop our own voices by incorporating our traditional techniques and refreshing them to develop new ideas and techniques out of it. My new collection is inspired by my last trip to Congo in 2021. I discovered so much progress after five years away from my homeland, and I was very captivated by the new construction and architecture. But as much as I was in awe, I was saddened by the loss of our identity in the development of our current architecture. For me, I asked, are these buildings serving or destroying this culture and President Mobutu’s vision of authenticity?

     

    And I believe authenticity is compatible with ideas such as natural synthesis. As a matter of fact, you can’t have natural synthesis without authenticity, for natural synthesis is formed from one’s own, or in our case, a culture’s own process of transformation and change. And I’ve quickly realized that it's our responsibility to conceptualize this transformation into our architecture. Not necessarily new, but progressive and responsive to the interests of Congolese society. Congolese architects must stop trying to copy what already exists in so-called developed countries. Rather, it is our responsibility to look to our own history and heritage to produce architecture that reflects our country, our climate, our ideas, and our history.

  • Artist Statement

    “My creative process began with a desire to connect my African heritage with contemporary art. My artwork draws its strength...

    “My creative process began with a desire to connect my African heritage with contemporary art. My artwork draws its strength from the cultural expressions of the Songwe, Tshokwe, Ngala, Luba, Kongo, Pende, Yaka and Kuba people of The Congo, as well as the Baule of the Ivory Coast and the Benin styles of Nigeria. These skilled ironworkers, talented embroiderers, and capable woodcarvers displayed a uniqueness in their artwork that was truly one of a kind.

     

    Syncretism, my genre of expression, is the fusion of separate concepts into a new and unique idea. For me, that’s incorporating classical African art and contemporary art. I use Kongo as my reference, because it’s the land where my parents, and their parents, and I were born and raised. Where my sense of identity was established, and my reverence and appreciation for historical Kongo culture and art nurtured. It’s more than a fad or trend to me. It’s my home. My representations of the creations incite an appreciation of self and also a way of learning to celebrate ourselves.

     

    This series was inspired by my experiences growing up as a teenager during the Congolese civil war. Because of the lack of electricity in my country, the oil lantern has always been a part of my life. Also, due to the nation’s insecurity, simple tasks, such as walking to school meant exposing myself to a high risk of danger. Not having much money or access to anything, I used what was available, which was a screwdriver as my weapon of defense. In this series, oil lanterns and screwdrivers are the primary materials used. Materials that once were a necessity of life and a form of protection, are now deconstructed embodiments of African pride, happiness, prosperity, calmness, and excitement, that were present during pre-colonial Kongo and are still present today. When I create sculptures and installations, my goal is to manifest these ancestral characteristics so that they can hopefully become visible within our communities and our world. My passionate desire is to create artworks that can be a source of excitement for one and escape for another.”

     

    Image courtesy William Twitty Photography.

  • About Masela Nkolo

    Image courtesy William Twitty Photography

    About Masela Nkolo

    Masela Nkolo is a multidisciplinary artist who resides in Atlanta. He was born in Kinshasa, Congo where he graduated in fine arts with an emphasis in large-scale sculpture from the academy of fine arts. After failing his first year in art college in the course of sculpting allowed him to confront his identity as a Congolese and to reap the benefits of his heritage.Afterwards, Masela quickly joined his friends in an  art movement in the streets of Kinshasa. Together they called their movement  "Neo-Ngongism." They started out exhibiting in the streets with the goal of awakening the consciences of the population through the arts. 

     

    His work has previously been exhibited on display at various galleries such as Moca, GA; the Mint Museum, NC and Artfields, SC.

     
  • About Lauren Tate Baeza
    Lauren Tate Baeza | Image Courtesy Ted Pio Roda Photography

    About Lauren Tate Baeza

    Lauren Tate Baeza joined the High Museum of Art in November 2020 as the Fred and Rita Richman Curator of African Art. Baeza oversees the African art collection of more than one thousand objects, including extraordinary examples of masks and sculpture, exceptionally fine textiles, beadwork, metalwork, and ceramics. The collection’s holdings reflect the continent’s deep, rich history, as well as contemporary innovations. An Atlanta native, Baeza is a curator and Africanist with a background in international aid organizations and museums. As a scholar, she has researched African political and economic phenomena through the lens of cultural geography, specifically examining the spatial history of food culture and artistic practices within the continent and across the Atlantic.

    Prior to joining the High, Baeza served as director of exhibitions at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights from 2018 to 2020. Concurrent with her position at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, Baeza also curated the Morehouse College Martin Luther King Jr. Collection, featuring approximately ten thousand items, and managed the James Allen and John Littlefield Collection. Previously, she served as executive director of the APEX Museum in Atlanta, which interprets, presents, and celebrates Black history.

    Baeza holds a Master of Arts in African studies from the University of California, Los Angeles; a Bachelor of Arts in Africana studies with a cultural studies concentration from California State University, Northridge; and a certification in curatorial studies from Sotheby’s Institute of Art.