Gléhoué - Home of the Earth (2024)
Join Us for the Opening of "Gléhoué – Home of the Earth"
You are warmly invited to the opening of our newest group exhibition on Saturday May 25th starting at 3:30 PM. From 3:40 PM – 4:00 PM the dance performance 'The Persistence of memory' will be performed.
“Gléhoué – Home of the earth” is the first exhibition in a new series exploring the diversity of African contemporary art. Born from the notion “African contemporary art does not exist”, this series seeks to show a glimpse of the vast diversity in contemporary art from Africa by visiting artists in various countries or regions of the continent and rather let the stories evolve from there, than working from a pre-conceived theme or narrative.
The first stop in this artistic journey is Southern Benin, cradle of the African traditional Vodoun religion and home to other related religions with rich spiritual traditions going back to the earliest of times. Steeped in a grand ancient history full of powerful kingdoms, ferocious wars, source of great pride with many tales about glorious heroes, the amazons, incredible bravery and loyalty beyond belief. Also home to a past full of tragedies, full of the most unbelievable cruelties and suffering, with the darkest era of slave trade at its heart. The earth of Benin has witnessed the best and the worst of mankind, encompassing all. In the exhibition we show four artists who are firmly rooted in this dual history and the religious and spiritual heritage that still breaths in every corner of Beninese society:
- Tchif Tchiakpe (1973)
- Marcel Kpoho (1988)
- Rafiy Okefolahan (1979)
- Elise Takoudagba (1978)
Tchif Tchiakpe (1973, Cotonou), master colorist from Fon descent is close at heart to Gléhoué (Ouidah) and its Vodoun beliefs. Internationally well-recognized for his abstract works, Tchif returns to his figurative abstract painting style in this new body of works, where he shows in one hand the duality of life, be it at a personal level or at large in society, and in the other the universality of it all. That results in a series of poetic almost mask-type portraits, beautiful and bold in their apparent simplicity. Where every line and color, every square cm seems to be exactly and consciously dosed: The opposing Les roi and Les visables, Mi Ange and Mi Ange1, but also the universal Les as de Dieu and Les as des coeurs.
Marcel Kpoho Marcel Kpoho (1988, Porto Novo), emerging artist also from Fon descent but equally close to other spiritual traditions, like the Yoruba Ife religion, creates his own black universe populated by sculptures from recycled tyre slices. Kpoho’s choice to recycle the omnipresent non-biodegradable rubber tyres in African urban life, is not only a way to cycle up waste and create awareness of environmental issues, but also serves as a great metaphor for the dark, tough side of mankind which intrigues him and is part of the society he grew up in. Ranging from sculptures larger than life to wall sculptures, all have this raw, edgy, intriguing quality, confronting viewers with an almost harsh, masculine reflection of human identity. Some of the masks presented relate to his contemporary interpretation of indigenous deities, but most are typically symbolic means for man to protect himself and elevate his soul through meditation from his dark, heavy self.





