The Prague Post - In Dakar, Rwandan director breathes life into plundered African art

EUR -
AED 4.292058
AFN 74.796705
ALL 95.739902
AMD 439.501881
AOA 1071.700287
ARS 1615.181615
AUD 1.652823
AWG 2.105125
AZN 1.989016
BAM 1.95598
BBD 2.350946
BDT 143.393194
BHD 0.440869
BIF 3471.046536
BMD 1.168703
BND 1.48885
BOB 8.065777
BRL 5.957814
BSD 1.167222
BTN 108.093721
BWP 15.722649
BYN 3.390299
BYR 22906.569735
BZD 2.347576
CAD 1.615924
CDF 2688.015862
CHF 0.924888
CLF 0.026491
CLP 1042.622672
CNY 7.984401
CNH 7.985078
COP 4271.420782
CRC 542.654575
CUC 1.168703
CUP 30.970617
CVE 110.444564
CZK 24.370311
DJF 207.701646
DKK 7.472269
DOP 70.560383
DZD 154.652069
EGP 62.051209
ERN 17.530538
ETB 182.96016
FJD 2.583417
FKP 0.869606
GBP 0.870689
GEL 3.143803
GGP 0.869606
GHS 12.873236
GIP 0.869606
GMD 86.484019
GNF 10255.3648
GTQ 8.92986
GYD 244.203515
HKD 9.155145
HNL 31.122221
HRK 7.53135
HTG 153.085396
HUF 376.799028
IDR 19946.304643
ILS 3.584879
IMP 0.869606
INR 108.069982
IQD 1531.000324
IRR 1538012.539093
ISK 143.396517
JEP 0.869606
JMD 184.54935
JOD 0.828628
JPY 186.047507
KES 151.054593
KGS 102.201283
KHR 4689.422469
KMF 492.023759
KPW 1051.778675
KRW 1726.52584
KWD 0.361164
KYD 0.972702
KZT 556.60836
LAK 25670.551595
LBP 104657.312322
LKR 368.298616
LRD 215.333735
LSL 19.084647
LTL 3.450874
LVL 0.706936
LYD 7.427084
MAD 10.869988
MDL 20.158372
MGA 4850.116204
MKD 61.605336
MMK 2454.01836
MNT 4178.404257
MOP 9.419188
MRU 46.760167
MUR 54.438366
MVR 18.056387
MWK 2030.036479
MXN 20.319355
MYR 4.651399
MZN 74.738054
NAD 19.085467
NGN 1591.445889
NIO 42.915031
NOK 11.111918
NPR 172.948133
NZD 1.998318
OMR 0.449375
PAB 1.167212
PEN 3.941452
PGK 5.038569
PHP 69.723587
PKR 326.097181
PLN 4.247667
PYG 7540.790646
QAR 4.261204
RON 5.09157
RSD 117.356443
RUB 90.721704
RWF 1708.058759
SAR 4.385814
SBD 9.406399
SCR 16.406402
SDG 702.390533
SEK 10.868957
SGD 1.48853
SLE 28.750438
SOS 667.910462
SRD 43.914587
STD 24189.782925
STN 24.905051
SVC 10.213071
SYP 129.204538
SZL 19.084689
THB 37.527184
TJS 11.106364
TMT 4.096302
TND 3.370246
TRY 52.177424
TTD 7.91783
TWD 37.095554
TZS 3032.783169
UAH 50.700516
UGX 4301.414195
USD 1.168703
UYU 47.374562
UZS 14281.545118
VES 555.207743
VND 30766.0943
VUV 139.700521
WST 3.236478
XAF 656.025784
XAG 0.015551
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.158477
XCG 2.103721
XDR 0.815886
XOF 656.227503
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.793652
ZAR 19.20072
ZMK 10519.724829
ZMW 22.265335
ZWL 376.32174
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    58.36

    +1.7%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.89

    -0.96%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.59

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -1.3200

    97.13

    -1.36%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    90.32

    +0.4%

  • BP

    0.0100

    45.9

    +0.02%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    22.39

    +0.45%

  • AZN

    0.7200

    204.99

    +0.35%

  • RELX

    -0.5900

    33.34

    -1.77%

  • BTI

    -1.1000

    58.85

    -1.87%

  • BCC

    1.3500

    80.58

    +1.68%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.98

    +1%

  • RYCEF

    1.9800

    17.23

    +11.49%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.85

    +0.5%

In Dakar, Rwandan director breathes life into plundered African art
In Dakar, Rwandan director breathes life into plundered African art / Photo: SEYLLOU - AFP

In Dakar, Rwandan director breathes life into plundered African art

In Rwandan playwright Dorcy Rugamba's latest work, a young African steps into an austere European museum and tells an ancient mask he is looking for the soul of Africa.

Text size:

The artefact comes to life as a woman.

"You will find neither the truth about your ancestors, nor your past -- here Africa is extinguished," it responds, with shrill laughter.

The unconventional performance, "Supreme Remains", premiered at this year's Biennale of Contemporary African Art being held in the Senegalese capital Dakar until June 21.

"If you follow me, I will take you on a tour of the rivers that led us from your ancestors to these places," says the mask, played by the French actress Nathalie Vairac.

But, she warns, "we will have to walk through mud."

As she leads the museum visitor through one large room after another, she invites audience members to examine the blind spots in the official narrative of colonial history.

In one, they meet a scientist from the late 19th century who measured skulls hoping to prove alleged European superiority.

In another, they encounter a Belgian army general -- based on a real historical figure -- who kept the skulls of three African dignitaries at home.

Rugamba, the play's director, said the performance was rooted in history.

"Scientists ordered human remains from the conquerors by the thousands, which were then used to develop racial theories and stereotypes," he said.

- 'Age of disquiet' -

Towards the end of the tour, spectators find themselves among the rolling hills of Rwanda for an initiation ceremony.

The character of the museum visitor learns to "unlearn the past".

French academic Benedicte Savoy said she was "overwhelmed" by the performance.

"It seemed to convey in just one hour things that we normally have to read in hundreds of pages," she said at a debate after a performance last week.

She and the Senegalese writer Felwine Sarr published a landmark report on the restitution of African cultural heritage in late 2018.

Sarr said much progress had been made since, as what was once a niche topic had made its way into public debate.

"Now museums have to be transparent and reflect on so-called ethnographic collections -- it's unprecedented," he said.

"These museums have entered an age of disquiet."

In November 2021, France returned 26 artefacts to Benin.

The works -- part of the royal treasures of Abomey that colonial troops looted in 1892 -- had been held in the Musee du Quai Branly in Paris.

An exhibition of the returned treasures recently attracted nearly 200,000 visitors to Benin's city of Cotonou in just 40 days, according to the authorities.

France also returned a sabre to Senegal in 2019 and a crown to Madagascar in 2020.

The play's director Rugamba, who is also an actor, asked how an entire continent could be emptied of its cultural heritage.

"An African researcher who wants to work on the history of his country must travel to a thousand places without even being sure that he'll be given a visa," he said.

"It's an untenable situation."

- 'Move forward' -

Hundreds of thousands of African works of art continue to be held in Western museums and private collections, but there have been mounting calls for them to hand back the colonial spoils.

Sarr said he welcomed African nations demanding restitution.

In 2019, "seven West African countries requested the equivalent of 10,000 objects, including countries that were at war and that you would expect to have other concerns," he said.

The Biennale's symposium last week featured a debate on how to re-invest meaning into returned artefacts and reconnect them to contemporary Africa.

"If we believe an object to have historical, artistic value and that it must be there to tell a story, then we should put it in a museum," said Sarr.

But objects that have ritual functions can be returned to communities, while those that researchers would like to study can go to universities or art centres, he added.

Dialika Haile Sane, a screenwriter in her thirties, said she felt the "full force" of emotion while watching the theatrical performance.

She said there was no reason artworks should not be returned to "where they were born".

"If we don't reclaim what belongs to us, we can't really move forward," she said.

X.Vanek--TPP