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New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations - Featured Exhibition | San Antonio Museum of Art
New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations - Featured Exhibition | San Antonio Museum of Art
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On View February 28
New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations
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On View Now
New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations
February 28, 2026–July 05, 2026
Cowden Gallery
Visiting SAMA
Kimi
masquerade ensemble in honor of André Sanou’s
Qui Dit Mieux?
, 2022 (headpiece by David Sanou in the studio of André Sanou; the maker of the body requests anonymity). Collection of the Fitchburg Art Museum. Photo courtesy of the New Orleans Museum of Art.
The first exhibition of its kind,
New African Masquerades
presents the work of four artists working today in four different regions of West Africa: Chief Ekpenyong Bassey Nsa (Nigeria), Sheku “Goldenfinger” Fofanah (Sierra Leone), David Sanou (Burkina Faso), and Hervé Youmbi (Cameroon). Focusing on each, we learn about masquerades that honor family, support the livelihoods of their makers, offer new imagery, and circulate through twenty-first century technology. Along with thirteen masquerade ensembles made from materials including wood, cloth, fabric, sequins, raffia, beads, feathers, and shells, the exhibition includes an immersive video experience, with 360-degree views showing masquerade ensembles as they are made and performed.
Challenging historical collecting practices, the artworks included in
New African Masquerades
were newly commissioned for museum display, with the featured artists and communities actively negotiating how each artwork would be presented. To upend the idea of the “anonymous African artist,” the exhibition recounts in-depth stories about the lives, motivations, and ideas of each of the four participating masquerade makers.
Reflecting the global, collaborative nature of the exhibition,
New African Masquerades
has two parallel tours: one through US institutions and the other to museums in Africa. Most centrally, the exhibition offers a vision of African masquerades as contemporary art, of and speaking to our moment.
The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color catalogue.
New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations
is organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art in partnership with the Musée des Civilisations noires in Dakar, Senegal, and received generous support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The exhibition is directed by Amanda M. Maples, PhD (New Orleans Museum of Art), in collaboration with Jordan Fenton, PhD (Miami University), Lisa Homann, PhD (UNC Charlotte), Aimé Kantoussan, PhD (MCN), and Hervé Youmbi.
Exhibition Gallery
Kimi
masquerade ensemble in honor of André Sanou’s
Qui Dit Mieux?
, 2022 (headpiece by David Sanou in the studio of André Sanou; the maker of the body requests anonymity). Collection of the Fitchburg Art Museum. Photo courtesy of the New Orleans Museum of Art.
Hervé Youmbi, Cameroonian (active in Douala),
Tso Scream Mask, Visages de masques (IX) series
, 2015–2023. Wood, pigment, fiber, beads, textile, glue, velvet and cotton fabric, silk embroidery, horse-hair. Collection of the New Orleans Museum of Art, museum purchase, Robert P. Gordy Fund, 2023.38.1-.7.
Sheku “Goldenfinger” Fofanah, Sierra Leonean (active in Freetown),
“Fairy” Masquerade Ensemble
, 2022. Fabric, sequins, wood, paint, glue: life-size. Commission for the Fitchburg Art Museum. Photo courtesy of the New Orleans Museum of Art.
Chief Ekpenyong Bassey Nsa, Nigerian (active in Calabar),
Afia Awan Masquerade Ensemble
, 2022. Polyester fabric, raffia, leather: life-size. Collection of the New Orleans Museum of Art, museum purchase, Françoise Billion Richardson Fund, 2022.85.a-.h.
Hervé Youmbi,
Bamiléké-Kwele Ku'ngang Gorilla Mask and Single-faced Rhino Mask
, during a ceremony in Fondanti village, 2019. Photo by Hervé Youmbi. Courtesy of the artist and Axis Gallery, New York and New Jersey.
A pair of
Kimi
masks (headpiece carved by David Sanou in the studio of André Sanou) performing greetings with the lead griot Tchiedo playing his drum behind them, Bindougosso district, Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso, May 3, 2022. Photo by Lisa Homann.
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