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Excerpt:
...Much has been written about the extraordinary impact
of African sculpture upon 20th century European art.
Although by the turn of the 19th century artists like
Derain, Vlaminck, Matisse and Braque were all drawing
inspiration from non-Western art, it is Picasso’s Les
Demoiselles d’Avignon of 1907 which is the best
known example of a 20th century painting showing the
direct influence of African sculpture, particularly
masks, on progressive artists of the time. It has long
been customary to refer to this movement as Primitivism,
a term which describes Western reaction to so-called
‘tribal arts’, rather than non-Western art itself. In
the words of William Rubin, ‘Primitivism is thus an
aspect of the history of modern art, not of tribal art.’(1)
It is ironic that at the very time when wood sculpture
from the African and Pacific colonies of France, Britain,
Belgium and other European countries began to
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inspire Western artists to move away from the literal
interpretation of nature, local artistic expression
was undergoing profound change in the colonies themselves.
Critics in Paris, London, Brussels and elsewhere, having
appreciated and welcomed the liberating influence of
non-Western sculpture on European art, tended to view
outside influences, such as colonialism, on African
art as cataclysmic and ultimately negative. New works
of African art were seen as travesties of masks and
figures produced before missionary and colonial intervention,
degenerate versions of the old pieces which by now had
been mostly swept away into ethnological museums throughout
the world. It was conveniently overlooked that, like
any great tradition, African art had always moved with
the times, reflecting a wide variety of foreign influences
over long periods.
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