Burning in Water is pleased to present Frédéric Bruly Bouabré & Serge Attukwei Clottey. The exhibition pairs drawings by the late Ivorian artist Frederic Bruly Bouabre with recent sculptures by the Ghanian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey. Though separated in age by over 60 years, both artists used prosaic materials to develop novel, singular styles incorporating traditional West African visual elements into artworks that function as penetrating inquiries into a broad array of subjects: historical, spiritual and political.
Bouabré and Clottey shared an affinity for producing highly iterative series of works that employ the repetitive use of material and form Frédéric Bruly Bouabré, Untitled, 2008, colored pencil and ink on cardstock. with incremental variation to construct intricate dialogues that are simultaneously expansive and highly-nuanced. The two artists also both integrated semantics into their work, parsing and recombining words and characters from disparate languages to introduce additional dimensions of meaning.
Born in Zépréguhé, a region of French Colonial West Africa, Frédéric Bruly Bouabré became one of the first individuals from the region to learn French and was trained by the colonial government to work as an administrator. Prior to his passing in 2014 at the age of 91, Bouabré spent decades working as a civil servant in Senegal and the Ivory Coast. Over this period, Bouabré developed his own style of drawing - typically utilizing card stock that was widely available in government offices.
In 1948, Bouabré had a revelatory spiritual experience that he described as a “magnificent sunlit vision.” He adopted an additional name, Cheik Nadro (The Revealor), and his drawings became infused with spiritual and religious themes. Bouabré began to employ his artwork as a means for philosophical, historical and spiritual inquiry. Thereafter, he used his drawings, frequently created as large series with common visual elements, as a method of investigating an astonishing array of topics, including regional African history, the role of Africa in the global political and economic system, astronomy, folklore and indigenous religious and cultural practices. Bouabré’s created a number of large series of drawings addressing specific topics, such as the Museum of African Faces in the Tate Museum collection. One of his most ambitious series was a project of semanticism in which Bouabré endeavored to translate the oral tradition of his own ethnic group, the Bété, into a written linguistic system. Through a series of over 1000 drawings that combined glyphic representation and text, Bouabré elaborated a syllabary of the Bété language utilizing 448 pictograms corresponding to phonemes.
The current exhibition features drawings from three distinct series: Celeste Lune (Celeste Moon), L’Homme Suspendu Par Les Couleurs (The Man Suspended by Colors) and La Semantique des Races (The Semantics of Race). In keeping with his expansive spiritual and philosophical approach in which he stressed the inter-connectedness of all things, Bouabre considered all of his later drawings to be constituents in an overarching series that he termed World Knowledge. The individual iterative series function as granular elements that, en masse, form a vastly intricate ontological system. Bouabre’s approach collapses a range of seemingly dichotomous categories: mystic vs. empirical; pictographic vs. semantic; traditional vs. modern; specific vs. universal; epistemological vs. descriptive. Running throughout Bouabre’s vast body of work, however, is a singular, highly beneficent viewpoint.
Born in Accra, Ghana several generations after Bouabré, Serge Attukwei Clottey shares with Bouabre an affinity for utilizing modest, common materials to create probing artworks - employing what he terms the “powerful agency of everyday objects.” As did Bouabré, Clottey employs historical and traditional elements in creating artwork grounded in a spirit of broad inquiry. Whereas Bouabré tended to focus on spiritual, linguistic and philosophical subjects, Clottey’s work tips more towards socio-political concerns while maintaining an overriding concern with the explication of complex systems. Clottey uses mundane materials to create artworks that articulate an array of themes including global trade and inequity, resource allocation, international migration, political corruption and collective memory.
Clottey spent four years studying painting in Ghana, where the curricular materials were mostly old art history textbooks that exclusively addressed the European painting tradition. A fellowship in Brazil introduced him highly divergent approaches to materiality, abstraction and representation. A subsequent introduction to the work of fellow Ghanian artist El Anatsui inspired Clottey to employ prosaic materials to create artworks that evoke traditional West African forms while simultaneously confronting current global economic and political concerns.
Although he works in an array of modalities including performance, sculpture, installation and photography, Clottey consistently uses shards of plastic shorn from the “jerrycans” that are ubiquitous throughout Accra as a material. These plastic containers are used to import industrial materials such as cooking oil into Ghana, most commonly from China. In Ghana, the cans are re-used for other purposes, principally storing and transporting water. Clottey has used plastic from these containers, which are also known “Kufuor Gallons” in reference to the former president who presided over Ghana’s slide towards water scarcity, as his indexical material for 15 years. Clottey terms his approach in the corpus of work as “Afrogallonism.”
With regard to subject matter, Afrogallonism’s primary tier of reference is to issues surrounding access to suitably potable water as a requisite factor for community health and development. The prevalence of the jerrycan in Ghana is illustrative of the widespread scarcity of safe water. Having been initially used to transport oil or other chemicals, the jerrycans are actually not suitable for storing drinking water. The jerrycans thus imply the threats of environmental degradation and toxicity. Moreover, their sheer number poses a larger environmental problem due to the need for mass disposal. The symbolism of the jerrycan’s therefore alludes to a paradoxical quagmire of globalism, whereby nations like Ghana are simultaneously constricted by both resource scarcity and the toxic ramifications of industrial over-production.
In his Afrogallonism works, Clottey has re-iterated the use of jerrycan plastic in myriad ways, including large-scale performances mounted on the streets of Accra by the performance collective GoLokal, which Clottey founded. The current exhibition features four examples of Clottey’s wall sculptures, which hang like textiles or tapestries. The reference to textiles is reinforced by the patterning of the plastic tiles and hand-painted elements, but the plastic segments retain indelible signs of ware and usage. The visual reference to Dutch wax textiles evokes issues of mercantilism, cultural appropriation and gender identity, with the later theme poignantly addressed in Clottey’s acclaimed performance piece My Mother’s Wardrobe.
Clottey’s engagement with trade points to the artist’s own personal and familial history in addition to the broader topics associated with globalism, as trade has been an intrinsic element in the historical identity of the Clottey clan. The artist’s ancestors traded meat and alcohol which they imported into the coastal region of Labadi via sea. A large sign in the artist’s studio features the name of his great-great-grandfather who developed the family’s coastal trade, Nii Tetteh Nteni. In the local Ga language, Nteni translates to “liquor,” and in later years the family transported alcohol for trade in yellow jerrycans.
Fragments of text and characters in multiple languages are painted onto the the plastic tiles of the Afrogallonism wall sculptures. Chinese characters allude to the origin of the jerrrycans, while the diversity of languages situates the work within the context of international trade and globalism. The abbreviated textual elements and symbols also function enigmatically - suggesting encoded or disrupted messages.
As elaborated by Clottey, Afrogallonism simultaneously employs multiple viewpoints: historical, descriptive and proscriptive. Conceptually, Clottey’s concept of Afrogallonism is congruent with the broader tenets of Afrofuturism, wherein water — particularly as regards its availability and pureness — is a key recurring theme. The artist views his treatment of the subject as not only illustrative but also provocative: “Afrogallonism is about pushing back to the West what they left behind.”
Frédérick Bruly Bouabré & Serge Attukwei Clottey is on view at Burning in Water, 317 10th Avenue in New York through June 17.
Frédéric Bruly Bouabré (b. circa 1923, Zépréguhé, West Africa; d. 28 January 2014, Abidjan, Ivory Coast). A pioneering West African artist, Frédéric Bruly Bouabré created a series of drawings reflecting over a half century. Bouabré’s work first gained widespread international attention in the seminal Magiciens de la Terre exhibition staged at the Centre Georges Pompidou and Grande halle de la Villette in Paris in 1989. In 1992, his work was featured in the Out of Africa show exhibition by the Saatchi Gallery in London, and subsequently presented at the 1993 Venice Biennale. A two-artist show featuring Bourabré’s work alongside that of Italian artist Alighiero Boetti was featured at the DIA Center for the Arts in New York and the American Center in Paris in 1993. Major solo exhibitions of Bouabré’s work have been mounted by the Ikon Gallery in the UK and the Musée Champollion in France. The artist’s Museum of African Faces series is in the permanent collection of the Tate Modern. Bouabré’s was again featured in the Venice Biennale in 2013.
Serge Attukwei Clottey (b. 1985, Accra, Ghana) lives and works in Accra, Ghana. Clottey earned a diploma in fine arts from the Ghanatta College of Art and Design in Ghana and has completed multiple fellowships abroad. He currently works in a variety of media including performance, photography and sculpture. For the past 15 years, he has produced his Afrogallonism series. His performance piece My Mother’s Wardrobe was the inaugural show at Ghana’s first contemporary art space, Gallery 1957. His work has been exhibited at Kampnagel Hamburg (Hamburg); The Mistake Room (Los Angeles); University of Museum of Contemporary Art (Amherst, MA) and the Goethe Institute and Alliance Francais (Accra).