Saturday, February 29, 2020

Babinga

Babinga Ceremony
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2020
The woman in the painting already appeared once behind Andre Didier in a painting I did not too long ago. Then I removed her. The photograph from which I pulled her image did not appear in the photo of Andre Didier but appeared on a separate photo that was also taken by Gilbert Rouget stemming from the same Ogooué-Congo Mission of 1946. Chant magique en partant pour la chasse au filet is unlike the work song that was illustrated in the Didier painting a recording of a ceremony. This was the reason the image was removed. For this track the image is more appropriate and may very well be depicting the actual person dancing in front of the chanting chorus of women that feature in Roget's photograph.

Friday, February 14, 2020

Some thoughts on representing "the other"

Bapende Chief
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2020
The Bapende Work Song found on Folk Music of the Western Congo does not come with any images associated with it. The song is a work song that was performed in the process of villagers building a house for their chief and was recorded by Leo A. Verwilghen in 1954. A photograph of a xylophone player is the only of the Bapende people included in the booklet that all Folkways' series come with. A Google image search on the Bapende yield an incredibly rich array of photos associated with Bapende ceremony. The song however is not a sacred song so I refrained from using any of the images showing those ceremonial masks and costumes that are associated with the Bapende and celebrated in Western art appreciation. While usually shying away from using images owned by giant image databases such as Getty, I settled for a small black and white photograph made by Michel Huet and owned by Getty Images. The fabric used on the chief's hat has the same pattern as the headdress on one of the Rundi women that I painted and subsequently adopted not too long ago. The pattern is made of triangles that create intricate negative space patterns. 
The photo also clearly shows facial markings on the chief (either tattoos or scarification) that I assume functions as identification of a chief. I've been thinking about identity a lot lately, reading Reasons and Persons by the philosopher Derek Parfit and using the topic repeatedly in the art appreciation I currently teach. Body art, including the ever so popular art of tattooing, is a medium closely associated with personal identity. Yet, in many non-Western cultures the identity expressed is not a personal identity but a belonging to a certain group, religion, class, family and so on. The function of the tattoo is almost the exact opposite than the expression of individuality as it is used for in Western society. The person as individual, and the idiosyncrasies are more of the threat to the social structure than that they are celebrated. Many ceremonies, the sacred nature of these, are meant as a means to rise above (or beyond) oneself as an individual. To denounce personhood and become a sacred being shared with the ancestral (spirit) realm. It is perhaps rather unfortunate that over time the sacred meaning of ceremony and the subsequent loss of individuality has been used to simply control  ever larger groups that make up a society. So it happens that without any dissent the Bapende villagers happily get together and construct the roof over the new chief's building while performing the Bapende Work Song watched over by Leo Verwilghen.

Sunday, February 9, 2020

It's not all that esoteric



Dillinger
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2020
Cocaine in My Brain was a huge Top 40 hit for Reggae star Dillinger during my coming of age years in the Netherlands. It made it all the way to #1 in 1976. I'm sure the single Marijuana in My Brain from the following year was intended to replicate that success but failed to do so. You'd expect more given the Dutch affinity with marijuana. The band Doe Maar had a smash hit in 1980 with their marijuana anthem Nederwiet. I bought the Dillinger single in 1987 (I used to write dates on 45s). Dillinger, named by the legendary producer Lee Perry, was born Lester Bullock on June 25, 1953 in Kingston, Jamaica. I just finished painting Dillinger and have now just six more to go for the Top 100 2019. I figure I forward some of the (not so esoteric) paintings from these series that were painted last year. First Nick Cave, who after so many years made the list again due to the Peel Session Sampler LP that I played a few times last year. The record features Big Jesus Trash Can by Cave's band The Birthday Party. Adam Horovitz returned because of an MTV video  Live in Glasgow that can be watched on YouTube, and Captain Beefheart's Owed t'Alex appears on the compilation The Dust Blows Forward from 1999. It originally appeared on Shiny Beast from 1978.
Captain Beefheart
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2019
Nick Cave, The Birthday Party
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2019
Adam Horovitz, The Beastie Boys
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2019

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Saturnalian

Sun Ra
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2020
Sun Ra was born in Birmingham, AL as Herman Poole Blount in 1914 but he never liked to be reminded of that fact; "That is his-story, my story is my-stery." He claimed to be from Saturn but returned to Birmingham when his health was failing and died there in 1993. Searching the web for an image to paint I came across an interesting story by Mike Walsh called Stranger from Outer Space. I settled for the illustration Walsh used, and the article directed me to the movie Space is the Place that I diligently watched, the whole extended version of it. He's out there, for sure. The film features the Arkestra with singer June Tyson. The title track, which appears during the end credits, made sure that Sun Ra reappears in the top 100 2020. The entry for 2019, illustrated here, is from a video on YouTube of a concert in Berlin in 1983. The track is called Happy Birthday/Stars that Shine Darkly and the Arkestra features Archie Shepp on tenor. I can't resist to yet again quote Sun Ra, again from Walsh's article: In tomorrow's world, men will not need artificial instruments such as jets and space ships. In the world of tomorrow, the new man will 'think' the place he wants to go, then his mind will take him there. -- Sun Ra, 1956