C&’s Highlights of 2021 You Might Have Missed

11 January 2022
Magazine C& Magazine
3 min read
From the restitution of the Benin Bronzes to the overdue celebration of female artists from Africa; these are some of our most read articles in 2021.
The Benin Bronzes Restitution
A View from Nigeria
We asked 9 art professionals from the Nigerian art scene for their thoughts on the meaning of Germany returning the Benin bronzes in 2022.
White Label
How Warhol Erased the Identity of His Black Trans Sitters
Art historian Gürsoy Doğtaş analyses the power imbalances between Warhol and his BIPoC queer and trans sitters of lower Manhattan

<figcaption> Image above: Marsha P.Johnson (left) and Sylvia Rivera (right) at Gay Pride Parade, 1973. Photo: Leonard Fink. From the film "The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson", Netflix, 2017. Courtesy Netflix.
In Conversation
Minia Biabiany: Choreography of the Archipelago
In her work, artist Minia Biabiany from the French-speaking Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, examines the colonial dynamics between France and its overseas territories. C& América Latina spoke with her about the artistic creation process from within her Caribbean reality, about the nature of the island and the colonial crimes committed against it.
Design in Westafrica
Worldforming by Ghanaian Women in Architecture
For three generations of women born between Ghana’s independence in 1957 and the turn of the century, architecture has served as an unparalleled incubation platform for worldforming possibilities.

<figcaption> Latifah Idriss, Photograph awall drawing, © Latifah Idriss
Make Techno Black Again
The Exhibition TECHNO Reveals Institutional Blind Spots
Art historian Jamila Moroder argues that an exhibition in Bolzano, Italy, disconnects techno from its Black heritage, and suggests we take a more complex view.
Digital Art
What Are NFTs and What Do They Mean for BIPOC Artists?
NFT art has recently sold for millions, heralding a new age of opportunity for some and loss for others. Tash Moore looks at what a selection of BIPOC artists are doing about it.

<figcaption> Lizzy Aroloye, Alien Girl Loading, from series transcending. Courtesy the artist.
In Conversation
Disrupting the Archives with Renée Akitelek Mboya
Magnus Rosengarten spoke to the curator, who lives in Nairobi, about tracing an anti-racist Berlin student protest from 1966 among the German archives.
"Auf Deutsch"
Deborah Joyce Holman – Unless: The Potential of Subtle Acts of Refusal
We spoke to Swiss artist Deborah Joyce Holman about the key aspects of her poetic docufiction work.

<figcaption> Deborah-Joyce Holman, Unless (2021), Film Still. Yara Dulac Gisler & Deborah Joyce Holman. Courtesy of the artists
Celebrating Female Pioneers
Where are the Women Image-Makers in African History?
On the occasion of International Women's Day, our author Ethel-Ruth Tawe looks toward the continent to spy out female image-makers and their pioneering spirit.
In Conversation
Christelle Oyiri: As a DJ, I see Myself as a Healing Figure
We speak with the Paris-based multidisciplinary artist and DJ about her practice of easing pain and cataloging as a means of maintaining dignity.

<figcaption> Christelle Oyiri. Photo: Lucid Interval.
Read more from

On Ghosts and The Moving Image: Edward George’s Black Atlas

Confronting the Absence of Latin America in Conversations on African Diasporic Art

On Exile, Amulets and Circadian Rhythms: Practising Data Healing across Timezones
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Jazsalyn’s A(spora): On the Gullah Geechee Corridor

Denis Maksaens: Glitch and Representation in the Caribbean

