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Review by Vanessa H. Larson
The Washington Post's Style section ran a major feature on the exhibition Tsedaye Makonnen—Sanctuary :: መቅደስ :: Mekdes, including an interview with the artist.
Tsedaye Makonnen’s ethereal sculptures make a bold impression at the National Museum of African Art — but there’s much more than first meets the eye. TsedayeMakonnen WaPo 1.17.2025 by Kevin Dumouchelle on Scribd
Review by Mark Auslander
The publication that accompanied Heroes received a thoughtful review from scholar Mark Auslander in the summer 2024 edition of African Arts.
The medium is the message Dumouchelle cleverly integrates the familiar genre of the art catalogue with the look and feel of a graphic Heroes Review_African Arts by Kevin Dumouchelle on Scribd Video by Bard College Graduate Center, on the occasion of the Exhibiting Africa symposium Speaking at Bard College Graduate Center's recent symposium on the state of the field Exhibiting Africa, I had the opportunity to offer some brief reflections on the exhibition element of my curatorial practice to date. Through approximately six projects developed over my last 17 years of curatorial practice, in which I have had the honor to care for two significant, distinct public collections of African art, I offered some examples of the ways in which so-called “traditional” and “contemporary” African art can inform/inspire in gallery settings. All projects share the same fundamental rejection of the framing of a discursive split between “tradition” and “modern/contemporary,” which continues to centralize the European colonial moment.
Instead, the aim in my practice has been to look at African art history as an evolving continuum over time, in which artists from the continent have always been participant in their own internally determined trajectories of contemporaneity, tradition, and modernity—often simultaneously. The aim in my practice has been to invite visitors to consider art works in relation to each other, and to visitors’ own experiences, in the hopes that they may open up space for surprise, curiosity, and empathetic engagement. Published by Hirmer Verlag and jointly distributed by University of Chicago Press The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art will release the catalog to its landmark, award-winning, multi-platform project “Heroes: Principles of African Greatness” Sept. 3. Initiated and led by curator Kevin D. Dumouchelle, the “Heroes” project has grown from an in-person exhibition built of more than 50 art works from the museum’s collection, which ran from 2019 to 2022, to an ongoing multimedia digital experience featuring videos, an interactive tour, a curated playlist and finally, a book published by Hirmer Publishers and jointly distributed by the University of Chicago Press. The book, authored by Dumouchelle, is available in bookstores worldwide. Designed to meet a reader at their own level of interest—whether through big abstract ideas, intimate stories of personal achievement, close examinations of artistic imagination and excellence or via extra-sensory audio and digital interaction—I hope that the book may inspire future artists, storytellers and, indeed, potential heroes in the years to come. Learn more about the book here.
Video by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art Join this full video tour of my exhibition Heroes: Principles of African Greatness at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art to learn more about the art works, artists, and African heroes in history whose visions and ideas were embodied in this project. Review by Ian Bourland My exhibition Heroes: Principles of African Greatness received a full review in the Spring 2021 edition of the journal African Arts. Dumouchelle...has installed works from the museum’s collection in a dazzling, provocative way. Pairing the classical with the contemporary, he ...engages audiences with an interactive digital app, a lively playlist piped in to the museum’s atrium (available on Spotify), and splashy fonts and bold graphics for the wall text. Taken together, such strategies yield an immersive and playful experience that draws audiences of all ages into a dense survey of aesthetic and political history.
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Video by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art
In the face of the ongoing pandemic, the opening of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art presentation of the exhibition Caravans of Gold, Fragments in Time: Art, Culture, and Exchange Across Medieval Saharan Africa became an interactive, multi-media experience -- featuring a tour of the exhibition as well as welcoming remarks from partners and dignitaries in Morocco, Mali, and Nigeria, as well as the U.S.
Review by Holland Cotter The New York Times reviewed the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art presentation of World on the Horizon: Swahili Arts Across the Indian Ocean. A lot of museum shows make self-conscious gestures toward inclusion — high plus low, global plus local, insider plus outsider — but this one takes big-picture inclusivity, with its contradictions and confusions, as a primary subject. Review by Grace Aldridge Foster The National Museum of African Art's new permanent collection galleries, Visionary: Viewpoints on Africa's Arts, received a thorough and thoughtful review from Smithsonian Insider. This striking exhibition is organized into seven sections that highlight the perspectives of the many people involved with these artworks: the collectors who buy them, the scholars who study them, the artists who created them, the sponsors who commissioned them or who they were created for, the performers who may have used them in ceremonies, the museums that display them, and you, the visitor. Every section is designed to teach a better understanding of the artists’ intent, how the works made an impact and their ongoing lives in collections and museums. At every turn, the show demands engagement. Upon entering each new area visitors are confronted by critical questions at eye level in red text. For example, “Why do people commission artworks?”; “What makes a great artist?”; “How do you find the key visual details that reveal many different stories about Africa’s arts?” and “Is there a particular artwork by a Yoruba artist that captures your attention? Why do you think that is?” After joining the staff in October 2016, Dumouchelle, a former Brooklyn Museum curator, says Visionary was a wonderful way to begin his tenure at the National Museum of African Art. “I got to learn the collection firsthand, but I also had the chance to learn everyone at the museum and their personalities, their roles and their secret hidden talents and strengths,” he says. Article by Paulette Perhach I was one of three specialists in contemporary African art from across the world featured in a New York Times piece on the state of the field in 2016. “There’s an extent to which bringing an object into a museum is validating it, and saying: ‘This has merit. This is something that should be thought about and considered, in its own time and decades and possibly centuries afterward,’” he said. “...It’s a deliberative process of trying to think about the artists that will stand up over time and the stories that are relevant today but will also be important and relevant to talk about in the generations to follow.” Article by Antwaun Sargent The exhibition Disguise: Masks and Global African Art at the Brooklyn Museum was the subject of an extensive Vice Media feature upon its opening. “African masks as we have come to know them and expect to see them in Western context are really just a fragment of a lost performance of works that were once contemporary but are now frozen in time,” explains exhibition curator, Kevin Dumouchelle. "I want the audience to really understand African masquerade as this font of incredible creativity,” says Dumouchelle. “It is a dynamic and exciting artistic platform that changes every time it's performed and is a part of a rich longstanding tradition of artists engaging with and trying to change the world.” He adds, “Leaving this show, I hope that our visitors are able to look a little more critically at both contemporary and historical art." Feature by Thomas Page CNN produced a feature on Disguise: Masks and Global African Art at the Brooklyn Museum. The larger truths Dumouchelle cites are various. Racism, corruption and homophobia are addressed by contemporary artists -- issues, he suggests that "aren't always on the surface in public discourse today," but can be confronted "through the language of art in a way that is perhaps a bit more truthful." By Kevin D. Dumouchelle I was invited by the Financial Times to contribute an editorial about the state of the African art market in spring 2015. Pliny the Elder’s dictum that there is “always something new out of Africa” has been repeated among 'Africa-boosters' ad nauseam. Review by Jennifer Sefa-Boakye OkayAfrica, a digital media platform dedicated to African culture, music, and politics, reviewed Double Take: African Innovations at the Brooklyn Museum upon its opening in 2014. Alongside the exponential growth of major African art exhibitions such as the prestigious Dak'Art Biennale, and newer events like 1:54 Contemporary Art Fair and Lagos Photo Festival, which provide increased visibility and a necessary platform for contemporary artists from Africa and the African diaspora to showcase their work, Double Take's novel approach to mapping strains of influence within diverse works of African art through the ages highlights the long and nuanced history of the continent's artistic mastery. Review by Karen Rosenberg The New York Times reviews El Anatsui's first New York retrospective exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum. Anatsui’s installation process is even more flexible...curators may ruffle the surfaces of the wall hangings as they please, smoothing old wrinkles or developing new ones. You may fall in love with a piece in one show and not even recognize it on its next outing. Video by the Brooklyn Museum How did a 68-year-old artist from Nsukka, Nigeria, become a near-overnight sensation in the global art world? El Anatsui discusses his rise to fame, his inspiration, and the process behind the large-scale installations on view in Gravity and Grace with Kevin Dumouchelle, Associate Curator of the Arts of Africa and the Pacific Islands, and Susan Vogel, filmmaker and author of El Anatsui: Art and Life. Review by Holland Cotter Celebrated Ghanaian artist El Anatsui received his first New York solo show in the Brooklyn Museum's Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui (2013). Here, a New York Times Sunday feature previewed the exhibition themes. Unless there’s terrible news Africa doesn’t get much notice in this part of the world. But at the Venice Biennale six years ago it was the object of thousands of beauty-bedazzled eyes, even if some of those eyes didn’t know at first what they were looking at. Large but light and lighter is the goal. “I’m working toward buoyancy,” he said. Review by Holland Cotter A New York Times review of the African Innovations galleries at the Brooklyn Museum by Holland Cotter.
Review by Martha Schwendener The New York Times reviews Power Incarnate: Allan Stone's Collection of Sculpture from the Congo at the Bruce Museum.
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Clippings
A selection of reviews of my past work along with select media appearances. Archives
January 2025
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