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The Production of Social Space as Artwork 251

Hazoumé, and Pascale Marthine Tayou have thoroughly dismantled the randomness

and poverty of the bricolage aesthetic by elaborating new sculptural and pictorial

devises with recycled material: Olé with his painterly and monumental refabrications

of urban architectural fragments; Adeagbo with his mnemonic recontextualizations

of archives of colonial and postcolonial history in his sculptural and sign painting

appropriations; and Hassan with his arresting collages of masks, portraits, and crowds

fabricated out of torn surplus billboard advertising prints that manifest an unusually

raw festishistic power. Hazoumé’s plastic masks fashioned out of cut-out plastic jerry

cans on the other hand reside uneasily between genuine sculptural experiments and

afro-kitsch. The larger and more critical question is why has the bricolage aesthetic

persisted for so long all across Africa, and in fact seems to be acquiring an even

greater acceptance in the work of even younger artists. The upshot is that for some

reason recycling as an aesthetic option strangely continues to be seen by many

artists as a proper artistic choice for making art. This perhaps owes to the erroneous

notion that using recycled, impoverished material in clever ways somehow transforms

and elevates the assembled oddities into innovative, albeit uncanny artistic

products that raise local curiosity and please benevolent development workers.

40. Tokunbo is a Yoruba term that literally means “second child,” but in the typical

wry humor that accompanies responses to bleak socioeconomic conditions in

most African countries, the term has come to stand for the vast secondhand market

in objects of Western technological products such as cars, computers, electronics,

and assorted machines that have been reconditioned and made suitable for export

to Africa. The scale of the Tokunbo trade far outstrips that in new technological

products and increasingly has come under state scrutiny for the effects on the environment,

productivity, and safety.

41. In fact it seems unimaginable that there could be any other reason for this

response to secondhand, recycled commodity-fetish products of the developed world

beyond the survivalist strategies of people caught in the grips of brutal global economic

restructuring. It is also to such survivalist strategies that artists and intellectuals

have turned in order to protect their autonomy as critical producers of culture.

42. Kan Si, “Dimensons Variable,” 122.

43. A number of the critiques that accompanied the reception of “Documenta11-

Platform 5,” which devoted a strong part of the exhibition to exploring the relationship

between representation and the domain of social life, were based on abjuring

the political and ethical in the conception of the work of art. Typical of such

responses were criticisms from neoconservative writers such as Michael Kimmelman

of the New York Times, Blake Gopnik of the Washington Post, and Christopher Knight

of the Los Angeles Times.

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