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Meschac Gaba

The Museum of Contemporary African Art


  • Tate
  • Expo: 3/7/2013 - 22/9/2013, Tate Modern, London
  • by Edited by Kerryn Greenberg
Born in Cotonou, Benin in 1961, Meschac gaba moved to the Netherlands in 1996 to take up a residency at the rijksakademie. It was there that he conceived The Museum of Contemporary African Art 1997-2002, an ambitious work, which took him five years to complete and which cemented his reputation as one of the most important African artists working today.

ISBN 9781849761680 | E | PB
€32,95
available
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Publisher Tate
ISBN 9781849761680
Author(s) Edited by Kerryn Greenberg
Publication date August 2013
Edition Paperback
Dimensions mm
Pages 176
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Exhibition Tate Modern, London
Description

Born in Cotonou, Benin in 1961, Meschac gaba moved to the Netherlands in 1996 to take up a residency at the rijksakademie. It was there that he conceived The Museum of Contemporary African Art 1997-2002, an ambitious work, which took him five years to complete and which cemented his reputation as one of the most important African artists working today.
Consisting of twelve sections - Draft Room, Architecture, Museum Shop, Summer Collection, Games Room, Art and Religion, Museum Restaurant, Music Room, Marriage Room, Library, Salon and Humanist Space - this work challenges preconceived notions of what African art is and provides a new discursive space for social and cultural interaction, critiquing the museum's value both as as an institution, and as a symbol of cultural capital.The importance of this work, in the history of African art and in the lineage of critical reflections on the museum by artists such as Marcel Duchamp and Marcel Broodthaers, has been widely acknowledged in important exhibitions ranging from Documenta XI, Kassel in 2002 to Intense Proximity: La Triennale, Paris in2012. Tate has now acquired this work.