Museum-Quality African Arts of Utility: Stools, Dress, Chairs, Tables, Masks, Shields, Traditional — Ernie Wolfe Gallery

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1655 Sawtelle Blvd
Los Angeles, CA, 90025
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Drawing on 40+ years of field collecting in both East and West Africa, the Ernie Wolfe Gallery specializes in juxtaposition exhibitions between the works of modern American, often Southern California based artists, and those of contemporary African painters and sculptors, as well as traditional tribal sculpture and furniture.

Museum Quality Arts of Utility from Africa

“Much of Kenya [and East Africa in general] is composed of vast dry stretches of thorny brush rooted in poor sandy soil. Although there are regions where rainfall supports the continuous presence of greenery, most of the country is dependent upon seasonal rains, which often do not fall for years at a time. As a result, the majority of Kenyan peoples were pastoralists, moving constantly in search of forage for their herds, and hunter-gatherers who maintained a subsistence level existence.

In contrast, many peoples of West Africa have for centuries lived [by the major river systems—Congo, Niger, Volta, etc.] in sedentary societies based on agricultural production. This more stable life-style contributed to the development of a broad spectrum of arts including sculpture. Living in one place made it possible for people to turn their artistic talents toward the creation of objects which transcend purely practical needs.

The very different living conditions and life-styles of the more nomadic people of Kenya [and East Africa] led to the development of objects of a primarily utilitarian nature. Knowledge that each village location was less than permanent discouraged the production of material which was fragile or not directly related to daily existence.

Traditional everyday Kenyan objects display a combination of remarkable craftsmanship, aesthetics, and complexity of design. This blending of form and function elevates these utility objects to works of art.”

-Excerpted from Arts of Kenya, Museum of African Art: Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (1979)


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