STRATEGIC INTERPLAY: AFRICAN ART AND IMAGERY IN BLACK AND WHITE: TOLEDO MUSEUM OF ART, OHIO
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, chess motifs – particularly the iconic black and white checkerboard grid and the royal pieces - from pawns to queens and knights to kings - assumed even greater resonance with African art. European avant-garde artists used both chess and African imagery to express altogether new modernist sensibilities while African artists reimagined chess motifs both as poetic analogies to post-colonial conditions and as decorative patterns channeling indigenous design and symbolic meaning. The story of African art and chess reveals complex histories of cultural innovation, creative exchange, and competitive interplay from antiquity to the present time.
The exhibition is organized in three sections and comprises sixty-four artworks, including sculptures, textiles, ceramics, paintings and photographs held in the permanent collection of the Toledo Museum of Art and in other prominent museums and private collections. Diverse treatments of the archetypal black and white chess grid motif and its symbolic meaning are showcased in provocative pieces from the Kuba Kingdom and Francis Picabia to Bwa artists from Burkina Faso and Pablo Picasso. Ingenious artworks referencing royalty and power by Mary Sibande, Magdalene Odundo, Aida Muleneh, Constantine Brancusi, Man Ray, and Marcel Duchamp, among other historical and contemporary pieces are also showcased. Representative chess sets like Europeans vs. Africans created by ivory artisans in 19th century Dieppe, France are also featured.
Strategic Interplay seeks to broaden understanding about connections between African art and chess, and the strategic acumen involved in both creative pursuits. The exhibition aims to reveal parallel and overlapping metaphors, maneuvers, and motifs between the seemingly disparate fields of African cultural expression and the royal game of creative war-play with hope that viewers might appreciate African art through an alternative lens.
Strategic Interplay: African Art and Imagery in Black and White is organized by the Toledo Museum of Art and curated by Lanisa Kitchiner, Ph.D., Senior Manager of Interpretation and Curator of African Art at the Toledo Museum of Art; and Wendy Grossman, Ph.D., an independent art historian and curator.