Making Africa: A Continent of Contemporary Art

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Making Africa: A Continent of Contemporary Art
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Mateo Kries
By (author) Amelie Klein
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:345
Category/GenreArt styles not defined by date
ISBN/Barcode 9783931936525
ClassificationsDewey:709.6
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Vitra Design Museum
Imprint Vitra Design Museum
Publication Date 27 March 2015
Publication Country Germany

Description

Making Africa" takes a fresh look at African design. For the first time, we have a book that focuses on creative accomplishments on the continent, without being obsessed with the usual tropes of recycling, humanitarian design or traditional crafts. Instead, "Making Africa" shows a new generation of designers who use their work as a tool for economic, political and social change and therefore also to create a new future for the continent. Their creative output defies all definitions of genres - crossing over classical fields such as furniture design, product design and typography to encompass digital media, art, photography, architecture and film. A large section of the catalogue is dedicated to documenting work by over 120 protagonists of Africa's new creative epoch - including Cyrus Kabiru, Cheick Diallo, Mario Macilau, Francis Kere, David Adjaye, Kunle Adeyemi, Bodys Isek Kingelez, Robin Rhode, Alaforu Sikoki, Selly Raby Kan and many more. The historical and theoretical background is explored in essays and discussions with Okwui Enwezor, Koyo Kouoh, Edgar Pieterse and Amelie Klein, among others. These are complemented by statements from around 70 other experts from Africa, who met at interviews and think tanks in cities such as Cape Town, Johannesburg, Lagos, Dakar, Nairobi and Cairo. This is a book about the future of Africa and about a new, more open way of understanding design - which means it is also a book about what design can achieve in the 21st century.

Reviews

Making Africa captures the extraordinary constructive energy and the impulse to innovate...it helps demolish any notions that African ingenuity is constrained by poverty or tradition.--Rachel Pulfer "Azure"