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From Transparency to Opacity
In: Nka: journal of contemporary African art, Band 2023, Heft 53, S. 64-73
ISSN: 2152-7792
Since 2015, Cheikh Ndiaye has been painting the most famous theaters between Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, and Dakar, Senegal, including their emblematic names: the Mansour, Liberté, VOG, Vox, ABC, Rio, the Medina, and Le Paris, et cetera. The artist's obsessive paintings are without decorative or exotic intention. All of these movie houses stand, as if they were clichés of one another, as "realistic" representations of the chaos left behind by a foreclosed socialist utopia or a neo-liberal trash dump site; they interpellate the viewer/spectator. Cheikh Ndiaye's paintings of old movie theaters are intriguing for more than one reason. They are as fascinating for the visual information they reveal as they are for what each painting seems to be hiding, or for the opacity it claims for itself. This essay provides a Glissantian reading of Ndiaye's movie-theater paintings, not as transparent and nostalgic representations of iconic film houses, but as refigurations of landscape paintings. As Glissant puts it, landscape (le paysage) is not only a character on equal footing with the human and nonhuman species that occupy it in literature, paintings, and film; it has also become clear, for environmental and cultural reasons, that ignoring it risks undermining these art forms. Like Glissant, Ndiaye is revisiting the landscapes of closed movie-theaters for the purpose of reinvesting them with a new aesthetics, and a new way of visualizing the environment.
Tropiques and the Surrealist Movement in Martinique
In: Nka: journal of contemporary African art, Band 2021, Heft 49, S. 202-208
ISSN: 2152-7792
Édouard Glissant's Worldmentality
In: Nka: journal of contemporary African art, Band 2018, Heft 42-43, S. 20-27
ISSN: 2152-7792
One World in Relation
In: Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, Band 2011, Heft 28, S. 4-19
In 2009, equipped with a camera, Manthia Diawara followed Édouard Glissant on the Queen Mary II in a transatlantic journey from South Hampton, United Kingdom, to Brooklyn, New York. This extraordinary voyage, six days and five nights, resulted in an intellectual biography in which Glissant elaborates on his theory of Relation and the concept of "Tout-monde." This conversation is from that film: Édouard Glissant: One World in Relation (2009).
ARCHITECTURE AS COLONIAL DISCOURSE: ÂNGELA FERREIRA'S MAISONS TROPICALES
In: Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, Band 2008, Heft 22-23, S. 20-27
SELF REPRESENTATION IN AFRICAN CINEMA
In: Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, Band 2007, Heft 21, S. 74-81
Dial Ouaga for AFRICAN Cinema
In: Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, Band 1995, Heft 3, S. 46-49
On Tracking World Cinema: African Cinema at Film Festivals
In: Public Culture, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 385-396
ISSN: 1527-8018
Malcolm X and the Black Public Sphere: Conversionists Versus Culturalists
In: Public Culture, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 35-48
ISSN: 1527-8018
On Tracking World Cinema
In: Public Culture, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 339-343
ISSN: 1527-8018
Canonizing Soundiata in Mande Literature: Toward a Sociology of Narrative Elements
In: Social text, Heft 31/32, S. 154
ISSN: 1527-1951
Black British Cinema: Spectatorship and Identity Formation in Territories
In: Public Culture, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 33-48
ISSN: 1527-8018