Ulli Beier: Contemporary Art in Africa (1968)
Filed under book | Tags: · africa, art, art history

An early classic on the modern art in Africa focusing on Nigerian and other Anglophone artists.
First published by Pall Mall Press, London, 1968
Publisher Frederick A. Praeger, New York, 1968
173 pages
Reviews: G.I. Jones (Africa 1969), Daniel J. Crowley (American Anthropologist 1969).
PDF (42 MB, no OCR)
Comment (0)Venetia Porter: Word Into Art: Artists of the Modern Middle East (2006)
Filed under catalogue | Tags: · africa, art, art history, calligraphy, ceramics, contemporary art, hurufiyya, islam, language, literature, middle east, painting

This landmark catalogue is one of “the most comprehensive gatherings of Middle Eastern artists that has been undertaken in recent times.” Based on an exhibition mounted by the British Museum, it is “devoted to the recurring theme of calligraphy and how artists from the Middle East and North Africa use the traditional visual vocabulary of Arabic letters as a point of departure and an integral expressive element. The works, which were drawn mostly from the British Museum’s own collection of contemporary Islamic art, demonstrate how each artist celebrates the aesthetic powers and plasticity of the letters, while simultaneously pushing the boundaries, even sometimes subverting traditional canons. The artists manipulate letters, often transforming them beyond recognition, using ingenious and innovative methods, materials, styles, and daring compositions. Some use letters for purely aesthetic reasons, while others use them more instrumentally as writing, signs, or ciphers that allow the artists to grapple with issues of socio-political orientation and cultural and religious identity. For some artists this resonates with the sacred tradition of Islam and the Qur’an, while for others it is an undeniable part of their cultural heritage and a natural vehicle for expression.” (Sourced from the two reviews linked below.)
Foreword by Saeb Eigner
With contributions by Isabelle Caussé
Publisher British Museum Press, London, 2006
ISBN 0714111635, 9780714111636
144 pages
via IslamicManuscripts.info
Reviews: Islamic Monthly (2006), Maryam Ekhtiar (CAA Reviews 2007).
PDF (124 MB)
Comment (0)Paget Henry: Caliban’s Reason: Introducing Afro-Caribbean Philosophy (2000)
Filed under book | Tags: · africa, caribbean, colonialism, consciousness, epistemology, existentialism, historicism, history of philosophy, knowledge, marxism, ontology, philosophy, poeticism, poststructuralism

“Caliban’s Reason introduces the general reader to Afro-Caribbean philosophy.
In this ground-breaking work, Paget Henry traces the roots of this discourse in traditional African thought and in the Christian and Enlightenment traditions of Western Europe. Since Afro-Caribbean thought is inherently hybrid in nature and marked by strong competition between its European and African orientations, Henry highlights its four main influences–traditional African philosophy, the Afro-Christian school, Poeticism and Historicism–as his organizing principle for discussion.
Offering a critical assessment of such writers as Wilson Harris, Derek Walcott, Edward Blyden, C.L.R. James and George Padmore, Caliban’s Reason renders a much-needed portrait of Afro-Caribbean philosophy and fills a significant gap in the field.”
Publisher Routledge, 2000
Africana Thought series
ISBN 0415926459, 9780415926454
xiii+304 pages
Reviews: H. Adlai Murdoch (SubStance, 2002), Claudette Anderson (Small Axe, 2002), Charles Mills (Phil Review, 2003), Clevis Headley (Int’l J of African Hist Studies, 2003), Leslie R. James (North Star, 2004).
Interview with author (Linda Martín Alcoff, 2003)
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