En partenariat avec
 
 
 
Arts plastiques > Agenda
 
Romuald Hazoumé - débrouilles-toi, toi- même
Expositions > Arts plastiques
22/09/2005 > 29/10/2005

© Romuald Hazoumé

 
 

Renseignements :

In his first solo show in the United Kingdom, Beninese artist Romuald Hazoumé will be transforming the October Gallery's space with ARTicle 14, a combination of found-object installation, moving images and vast panoramic photographs. The hypothetical fourteenth and final article of many African constitutions is popularly interpreted as 'given the above rights, you'd better manage by yourself' – hence débrouilles-toi, toi- même, or 'look out for yourself because no one else will', both a critical reference to state corruption, and a popular manifesto for individual resistance. Inspired by a concern to reflect the realities faced daily by the people of Benin, Hazoumé here continues his long-running artistic dialogue about the historical and socio-political issues affecting West African societies.

The central installation takes a market vendor's cart that would once have carried Coca Cola, beer, plastic toys, jugs, footballs, brushes, razors and pans, and subverts it into a biting critique of the consumer encounter. Where once hung newly manufactured products, waiting for consumption, we now find empty shells and spent materials – the debris of capitalist exchange.

The exchange of commodities has for centuries defined the point of contact between Africa and Europe. The beginnings of an African market for European manufactured goods stem back to the early years of the Atlantic 'triangular trade', when guns, alcohol and textiles were touted along the West African coast by Europeans seeking to acquire slaves and raw materials. Many argue that this heralded the roots of an unequal system of exchange that continues to this day. Hazoumé alerts us to the history of the commodities that surround us, and reassigns them their place within political and social realities – a metaphor for the vacuity of the material world, and a wake-up call for us all.

Romuald Hazoumé was born in 1962 in Porto-Novo, in the Republic of Benin, where he now lives and works. In the mid 1980s, he began sculptural experiments with plastic jerry cans, used to dangerously transport fuel around Benin. The series of works that resulted received widespread acclaim, and have featured in numerous international exhibitions, from the Saatchi Gallery's 'Out of Africa' to, most recently, the Menil Collection in Texas and 'Africa Remix' at the Hayward Gallery.

 
adresse :

October gallery
24 Old Gloucester St, WC1N 3AL, London, Grande Bretagne
tel. +44 20 7242 7367
fax. +44 20 7405 1851 1851
[email protected]

 

Site internet:
http://www.octobergallery.co.uk