Bakuba Art

Geometry of Life

Raphia Textile

This special exhibition at the MARKK presents a selection of outstanding works from the former Kuba Kingdom in the Kasai region of today’s Democratic Republic of Congo, with a particular focus on intricate textile works made from raffia palm fibers. This collection, which has been rarely exhibited and remains largely unstudied, is critically examined and recontextualized in the exhibition. The objects were acquired by the German Africanist Leo Frobenius during his first African research and collecting expedition from 1904 to 1906 in the colonial Congo Free State, then under the possession of the Belgian king.

Through encounters on-site, initiated and recorded specifically for this exhibition, the works are reconnected with local communities and collective memory. In dialogue with contemporary textile works by the artist cooperative Futur-Velours.com and a graphic novel created for the project by Dr. Sixte Kakinda, the exhibition reflects on historical artistic production during the Belgian colonial era and offers new insights into its contemporary reception in Congo.

Supported by the Exhibition Fund of the Ministry of Culture and Media of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, the Gerda Henkel Foundation and the Mara and Holger Cassens Foundation.

 

 

View into the exhibition

Raffia textile Suosse: Hunting Bakuba/Kasai region/Democratic Republic of the Congo
Mask (Ngaady-a-Mwash) Bakete/ Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Drinking horn Bakuba / Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Head bench Bakuba /Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo/ early 20th century
Raffia mat/ Bakuba / Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo/ 20th century/
Mask Bushoong/ Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo/ early 20th century