The Manege Central Exhibition Hall (St. Petersburg), Triumph Gallery (Moscow), and Béton Center of Visual Culture (Moscow) presented Reversed Safari. Contemporary African Art from July 13 to September 3, 2023.
The project showcases a wide array of contemporary African art and its main artistic movements that have been developing over the past 60 years after the countries of the continent gained independence. The title of the exhibition refers to the need to reconsider the established one-dimensional view of African art.
The first large-scale exhibition of contemporary African art in Russia brings together the works of 49 African and 14 Russian artists, African artifacts from the collection of the V. D. Polenov Educational Initiatives Fund, as well as books, essays, and photographs of exhibitions that revealed the originality of African art to the Western audience.
Reversed Safari represents a variety of mediums, among which are painting, sculpture, photography, and comprises over 300 exhibits, including 9 video installations and 3 large-scale installations created specifically for the project. These works explore colonial heritage, mechanisms of cultural interaction, everyday life, and the search for identity and the practices of self-determination. In the exhibition space, they will enter into a dialogue with traditional African art. The works of Russian artists visualize the changing perception of the African region.
“Visitors of the Manege will be able to see different facets of contemporary African art, observe the dynamic transformation of local culture, and develop a new approach to the art of this region. The goal of the ‘reversed safari’ is to show the similarities and sometimes intersections of ‘culture zones’ that have been repeatedly excluded from the process of generation of knowledge, to avoid bias, and to find traces of ourselves and our own experience in the reflection of African artistic practices.”
Anna Yalova, Director of the Manege Central Exhibition Hall
The collection of Eddy Novarro, Brazilian photographer and collector of African art, was transferred to the collection of the Polenov Educational Initiatives Foundation in 2003. It was important for the curators of the exhibition to update this unique collection of African artifacts, which ended up in the collection of the State Museum. Vasily Polenov, like many Russian artists, traveled a lot, visited the Middle East, including Egypt, and brought various objects and artifacts to the estate. The collection of African art in the estate of V. D. Polenov is a continuation of the interests and hobbies of its owner.
“Until the middle of the 20th century, the art of African countries was perceived as an ethnographic or anthropological element, devoid of aesthetic value, and in recent years it has sometimes been considered a way to inform the Western audience of the realities of a different culture. Such a view reinforces stereotypes about Africa and forces us to perceive the artists solely through the prism of their ethnicity. When we say ‘reversed’, we mean our way of working: we gave artists the freedom of self-presentation.”
Alessandro Romanini, curator, one of the world's leading experts in African art
“The exhibition features works by contemporary Russian artists dedicated to the cultural heritage of Africa. The tradition of turning to other cultures, borrowing and aesthetic processing of languages and codes of various civilizations has always been characteristic of Russian art, which seeks ‘its own’ in ‘alien’, and often perceives foreign as a powerful resource for the reproduction of self-determination strategies.”
Yulia Aksenova, curator
The Reversed Safari exhibition in the Manege will become one of the most significant events in the framework of modern cultural exchange between African countries and Russia. It will be the key cultural event of the second Russia-Africa Summit, which will be held in St. Petersburg on July 27–28, 2023. Different in mentality, artistic specificity, and development in the cultural, economic and political sphere, the countries of Africa and Russia will present their understanding and vision of contemporary art and the world as a whole.
At the exhibition, the Manege team will present an extensive educational program that includes guided tours, art mediation, lectures and discussions, as well as additional events for different audiences, including children and teenagers, and inclusive activities.
The project was created with the support of the Committee for Culture of St. Petersburg.
Age limit – 12+.
Curators: Alessandro Romanini, Yulia Aksenova.
Assistant Curator: Alisa Prokhorova (Triumph Gallery).
Coordinators: Yulia Stal (The Manege Central Exhibition Hall), Alina Shcherbakova, Nikolai Molok Jr. (Triumph Gallery).
Architect: Alexandra Cristina Portilla Izmail.
Artists: Abdoul-Ganiou Dermani (Togo), Aboudia (Ivory Coast), Adeoti Azeez Afeez (Nigeria), Ajarb Bernard Ategwa (Cameroon), Amani Bodo (Congo), Antonio Sidibe (Italy/Mali), Aristide Kouame (Ivory Coast), Armand Boua (Ivory Coast), Khanyiso Booi (South Africa), Armen Agop (Egypt), Belinda Assenga (Tanzania), Brice Esso (Ivory Coast), Desire Monou Koffi (Ivory Coast), Dominique Zinkpe (Benin), Edwin Paul Kazoka (Tanzania), El Anatsui (Ghana), Essoh Sess (Ivory Coast), Esther Mahlangu (South Africa), Gonçalo Mabunda (Mozambique), Henri Kouakou (Ivory Coast), Hermann Kouman (Ivory Coast), Joseph Awuah-Darko (Ghana), Joseph Kitone (Uganda), Kelechi Chinwendu Kelechi (Nigeria), Laetitia Ky (Ivory Coast), Lara Baladi (Egypt), Lovemore Kambudzi (Zimbabwe), Mário Macilau (Mozambique), Mederic Turay (Ivory Coast/ Senegal), Medina Dugger (USA), Michelle Okpare (Nigeria), Moffat Takadiwa (Togo), Namsa Leuba (Guinea), Nnenna Okore (Nigeria/USA), Nù Barreto (Guinea-Bissau), Oladele Bello (Nigeria), Owusu Ankomah (Ghana), Pierre Bodo (Democratic Republic of the Congo), Sadikou Oukpedjo (Togo), Salim Bayri (Morocco), Seni Awa Camara (Cameroon), Serge Attukwei Clottey (Ghana), Sokey Edorh (Togo), Soly Cissé (Senegal), Tetè Azankpò (Egypt), Wael Shawky (Egypt), Yeanzi (Ivory Coast); Gayane Avetisyan (Russia), Maria Arendt (Russia), Natasha Arendt (Russia), Vasily Vlasov (Russia), Ivan Gorshkov (Russia), Katya Emelyanova (Russia), Ekaterina Zorkaya (Russia), Anton Kuznetsov (Russia), Lyubov Kulik (Russia), Olga Michi (Russia), Ulyana Podkorytova (Russia), David Ter-Oganyan (Russia), Varya Cheltsova (Russia), Olga Shurygina (Russia).