12015-11-13T15:17:20-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf"Croix de Lumieré" "Croix de Sang" 2010 Abdoulaye Konaté3media/croix .jpgplain2015-11-13T15:54:22-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf
12015-11-13T15:47:29-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf"Danse au CAMM/BFK" 2008 Abdoulaye Konaté1Konaté creates a reinterpretation of Malian traditions by blending together traditional Malian rituals with elements of contemporary dance.media/Danse-au-CAMM-BFK-2008.-Image-courtesy-the-artist-and-Blain-Southern-Photo-by-Christian-Gläser.jpgplain2015-11-13T15:47:29-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf
12015-12-02T07:26:51-08:00Esther Taati31697e73f53abcbd38abd462a9615a294727d484"Guernica"1Painting created by Pablo Picasso in 1937 after the brutal civil war in the Spanish city of the same name. Inspired Dumile Feni's creation of "African Guernica" (1967).media/Guernica.jpgplain2015-12-02T07:26:51-08:00Esther Taati31697e73f53abcbd38abd462a9615a294727d484
12015-11-13T15:50:31-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf"Hommage à Léonard de Vinci" 2014 Abdoulaye Konaté1media/Hommage-à-Léonard-De-Vinci-2014.-Image-courtesy-the-artist-and-Blain-Southern-Photo-by-Christian-Gläser.jpgplain2015-11-13T15:50:31-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf
12015-11-13T15:27:01-08:00Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf"Lutte contre le HIV" 1995 Abdoulaye Konaté2media/48693.jpgplain2015-11-13T15:52:52-08:0020150206113135+0100Anna Maybach202c132f69ad8aacd90e7209d393d122fd55c2cf
12015-11-13T03:17:23-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35Andrew Graham-Dixon interviews Chris Ofili2Andrew Graham-Dixon interviews Chris Ofili about his painting and exhibition at the Tate.plain2015-11-13T15:30:02-08:00YouTube2010-05-22T18:33:55.000Z7nnYr7EJCXcAGDofficialRebecca VanDiver59249666c6bbc4ec5c1292bd83a513b1e28070c7
12015-12-02T14:55:50-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9Ben Enwonwu, Anyanwu (1975)1media/Ben-Enwonwu-Nigerian-1921–1994-Anyanwu-.jpgplain2015-12-02T14:55:50-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9
12015-12-02T14:57:42-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9Ben Enwonwu, Princes of Mali (1967)1media/EnwonwuBenPrincesofMali.jpgplain2015-12-02T14:57:43-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9
12015-12-02T14:52:14-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9Ben Enwonwu, Storm over Biafra1media/2000-11-1lg.jpgplain2015-12-02T14:52:14-08:00Queen Stevenson601b8ca88f2ba41a5705841f663c2e4df8e133a9
12015-11-13T04:14:57-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35Chris Ofili, No Woman No Cry, 1998. Mixed Media, 96x72 in. Tate, London.3No Woman No Cry was part of the exhibition for which Ofili won the Turner prize in 1998. The mixed media work incorporates oil paint, acrylic paint, graphite, polyester resin, printed paper, glitter, map pins, and elephant dung on canvas. The painting depicts a woman crying against a byzantine-esque gold printed background. Elephant dung is used to form the base the painting rests on, as well as the woman’s necklace. The woman depicted in the painting is Doreen Lawerence, the mother of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence, a victim of a racist attack. Newsprint images of Stephen Lawrence can be seen in the middle of the tears. The painting, with the weeping mother who is represented as a Madonna figure, is a play off the notion of a piéta. Ofili’s title for this work references the popular Bob Marley song of the same title and is representative of his incorporation of popular culture and music into his art.media/T07502_10.jpgplain2015-11-13T04:42:58-08:00T07502Photo (c) TateNo Woman, No Cry 1998 Chris Ofili born 1968 Purchased 1999 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/T07502No Woman, No Cry 1998 by Chris Ofili born 1968Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35
12015-11-13T05:54:19-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35Chris Ofili, The Adoration of Captain Shit, 1999. Mixed media, 96x72 in. Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh.4The Adoration of Captain Shit is part of a three part series featuring the superhero/soul singer Captain Shit. The mixed media in this work consists of acrylic paint, oil paint, paper collage, map pins, glitter, and elephant dung on linen. In the image, bodiless hands of different colors reach towards an abstract, cape-wearing figure. The background is composed of large stars with newsprint eyes and smaller stars on top of elephant dung. The work is supported by two pieces of dung reading “they adore.”media/The-Adoration-of-Captain-Shit....jpgplain2015-11-13T06:28:30-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35
12015-11-13T06:00:50-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35Chris Ofili, The Healer, 2008. Oil on Linen, Tate, London.3The Healer depicts wilting yellow flowers against a dark, green and black background. The painting is one of Ofili’s more recent works produced in Trinidad that display a reduction in color palette and a shift away from mixed media. About The Healer, Ofili says, “it's about trying to paint the mystical nature of Trinidad. There's this bright yellow flowering tree here called the yellow poui that blossoms at certain times of the year with incredibly bright flowers. But overnight, or over a very short period of time, the flowers all fall off. You'll see one bright yellow tree, and the next day the flowers will be on the ground. Thinking about this I imagined that at night "the healer" feasts on poui flowers feverishly, and in the frenzy many of the flowers fall to the ground. I painted the first images of The Healer outdoors during a total lunar eclipse. He is born of the imagination sparked by the forms in the clouds hovering over the hills that night” (The Guardian. N.p., 20 Sept. 2009. Web).media/The-Healer-by-Chris-Ofili-001.jpgplain2015-11-13T06:40:21-08:00Natalie Hassellc13a775d80de4967fe62310f87310c01d04aab35
12015-09-27T03:24:56-07:00Haley Brown8210a44ed144bc12abac38c75dc6c0cf4e29e1f7Chéri Samba, "Condemnation without Judgment". 1989-90.1Chéri Samba, "Condemnation without Judgment". 1989-90. Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 148.3 x 200.7 cm. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. From: The Museum of Modern Art, http://www.moma.org (accessed September 26, 2015).media/samba1.pngplain2015-09-27T03:24:56-07:00Haley Brown8210a44ed144bc12abac38c75dc6c0cf4e29e1f7
12015-09-28T02:35:45-07:00Haley Brown8210a44ed144bc12abac38c75dc6c0cf4e29e1f7Chéri Samba. "Le Monde Vomissant". 2003.1Chéri Samba, "Le Monde Vomissant". 2003. Acrylics and glitter on canvas, 81 x 100 cm. African Contemporary Art Gallery, Lisbon. From: African Contemporary Art Gallery, http://www.africancontemporary.com (accessed September 27, 2015).media/samba2.jpgplain2015-09-28T02:35:45-07:00Haley Brown8210a44ed144bc12abac38c75dc6c0cf4e29e1f7