African Textiles

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
African visual arts have undoubtedly inspired Western artists and textile, furniture, household, and fashion designers to create works of art and consumer products. Numerous instances come to mind: Picasso's Bust [1987.399.FA] borrows elements from a Baga D'mba mask [1974.SC.18], Cosima von Bonin's RORSHACHTEST #4 [2007.56] incorporates a kikoi cloth worn by East African coastal peoples, Pierre-Emile Legrain's art deco seating replicates ceremonial chairs and stools of the Ngbombe, Fon, and Chokwe peoples, and Norma Kamali's and Emmanuel Ungaro's day and evening wear of the 1970s and 2000s, respectively, integrates bologon textile designs of the Dogon peoples (Mali).

Kuba textiles, exemplified by this cut-pile panel, have long captured the imagination of a host of designers since at least the early twentieth century [2007.50.6]. For example, Kuba textiles included in a 1923 African art exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum (then called the Brooklyn Institute Museum) inspired textile designs for women's dresses sold by Bonwit Teller and Company. The dresses were displayed in the store's window and a duplicate set was installed at the museum. The cloths—which the Kuba and related groups traditionally used as currency, elements of ceremonial dress, and shrouds for the dead—reappeared in the European and American art markets in the 1960s during the clashes between various African peoples in the then Congo. This was also the period of Black is Beautiful in the United States, and the cloth became one of the symbols of Black Pride. Fashionable again and again, stylized Kuba textile designs have been reproduced on stationery and household linens and furnishings, such as those manufactured by Canon in the 1960s, Martex in the 1970s, Tufenkian carpets, and Ralph Lauren's elaborate African Collection in the 1990s and 2000s. 

Excerpt from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 290-293.
  • Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles, Dallas Museum of Art, 2014-2015. 

NOTES
Moved notes about embroidery to a separate CC in Materials & Techniques called Embroidery in African Textiles. 

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS

AUDIO ASSETS 
108342014: UMO 
Gallery talk by Roslyn A. Walker, curator, Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 
Installation shot from  Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles
122881678: UMO

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
apply to objects where department_id equals 7
apply to objects where classification_name equals textiles
apply to content where content contains textile
apply to content where content contains africa
rules_operator
AND
General Description
African visual arts have undoubtedly inspired Western artists and textile, furniture, household, and fashion designers to create works of art and consumer products. Numerous instances come to mind: Picasso's Bust [1987.399.FA] borrows elements from a Baga D'mba mask [1974.SC.18], Cosima von Bonin's RORSHACHTEST #4 [2007.56] incorporates a kikoi cloth worn by East African coastal peoples, Pierre-Emile Legrain's art deco seating replicates ceremonial chairs and stools of the Ngbombe, Fon, and Chokwe peoples, and Norma Kamali's and Emmanuel Ungaro's day and evening wear of the 1970s and 2000s, respectively, integrates bologon textile designs of the Dogon peoples (Mali).

Kuba textiles, exemplified by this cut-pile panel, have long captured the imagination of a host of designers since at least the early twentieth century [2007.50.6]. For example, Kuba textiles included in a 1923 African art exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum (then called the Brooklyn Institute Museum) inspired textile designs for women's dresses sold by Bonwit Teller and Company. The dresses were displayed in the store's window and a duplicate set was installed at the museum. The cloths—which the Kuba and related groups traditionally used as currency, elements of ceremonial dress, and shrouds for the dead—reappeared in the European and American art markets in the 1960s during the clashes between various African peoples in the then Congo. This was also the period of Black is Beautiful in the United States, and the cloth became one of the symbols of Black Pride. Fashionable again and again, stylized Kuba textile designs have been reproduced on stationery and household linens and furnishings, such as those manufactured by Canon in the 1960s, Martex in the 1970s, Tufenkian carpets, and Ralph Lauren's elaborate African Collection in the 1990s and 2000s. 

Excerpt from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, The Arts of Africa at the Dallas Museum of Art (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), 290-293.
  • Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles, Dallas Museum of Art, 2014-2015. 

Fun Facts
 
Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
Moved notes about embroidery to a separate CC in Materials & Techniques called Embroidery in African Textiles. 

rules
Apply To
Objects
department_id
Equals
7
Apply To
Objects
constituent_id
Equals
textiles
Apply To
Content
content
Contains
textile
Apply To
Content
content
Contains
africa
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
masks (costume): AAT: 300138758
@Bilal-Gore
@Courtney
decorative arts: AAT: 300054168
#routed
*Arts of Africa
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
modernist (European style): AAT: 300021474
identity: AAT: 300257052
design (discipline): AAT: 300054171
designers: AAT: 300025190
African American: AAT: 300018125
race (group of people): AAT: 300256475
appropriation (imagery): AAT: 300180375
textile materials: AAT: 300231565
fashion: AAT: 300055811
Baga: AAT: 300015927
108342014: UMO
primitivism (artistic concept): AAT: 300056548
122881678: UMO
source file
cultures_and_traditions-0131.xml.nores