RechercherOpportunitésÉvénementsÀ proposHubs
C&
Magazines
Projets
Éducation
Communauté
Événement

Congo Art Works – Popular painting

Bruxelles, Belgium7 Octobre 2016 - 22 Janvier 2017
Congo Art Works – Popular painting

Congo Art Works – Popular painting

This exhibition reveals, for the first time in Belgium, part of the collection of historian Bogumil Jewsiewicki (Université Laval, Canada). Recently acquired by the RMCA, the collection was assembled between 1968 and 2011.

Just like music and dance, popular painting is inextricably linked to daily life; and this is also the case in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It gives us an impression of the collective memory and this is clear to see in this exhibition of paintings from 1968-2012. Portraits, landscapes and allegorical paintings alternate with urban scenes, historical figures and critical reflections on religion, politics and social problems. Humour is never far away. Historical objects, photos, drawings and archive footage provide a broader perspective and similarities to older art and other genres from Congo are clearly visible. The meaning behind popular paintings doesn’t seem to be fundamentally different from the role which older art forms played in Congolese society.

Curators: Bambi Ceuppens (anthropologist) and Sammy Baloji (artist)

An exhibition of the Royal Museum for Central Africa, in collaboration with the Centre for Fine Arts Brussels.

.

www.africamuseum.be

www.bozar.be

Plus d'articles de

Beyond Representation

Beyond Representation

Pérez Art Museum Miami
7 déc. 2023–31 déc. 2026
Diverse work uniforms displayed on stands in a bright room with large windows.

Dignidade e luta: Laudelina de Campos Mello

Instituto Moreira Salles
16 mai–22 nov. 2026
An art installation of white fabric ropes hangs within a bright atrium with a glass ceiling, some looping in the foreground, others vertical against a large window overlooking a city.

Cecilia Vicuña - The vanished glacier

Castello di Rivoli
30 avr.–20 sept. 2026
A man leans against large speakers next to a customized mobile record shack called "Swing A Ling," painted with music genres like Reggae and Soul.

Dancing the Revolution

Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
11 avr.–20 sept. 2026
Illustration of two naked people in a teal bathroom; one sits on the edge of a bubble bath holding a katana, while the other relaxes in the bubbles with a drink.

The Object of Power is Power

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art
6 mai–20 sept. 2026