This article examines two socially engaged Ugandan art projects: the Disability Art Project Uganda (DAPU), and Lilian Nabulime’s AIDS sculpture. By analyzing both initiatives, I attempt to characterize a new moment in the relations between artistic practice and social intervention in the Ugandan context. I argue that projects such as DAPU and Nabulime’s are confronting the current Ugandan situation of economic and political transformation, marked by the weight of the informal and the challenge of a nation-based cultural sphere. Finally, I point out some similarities with other African socially-engaged art initiatives.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Socially-engaged art practices are understood to borrow from several disciplinary territories where ...
In this paper I undertake a review of Dak‟Art 2012. An engagement of this kind is considered pertine...
This paper seeks to consider some specific aspects of contemporary art, specifically contemporary Af...
This article examines two socially engaged Ugandan art projects: the Disability Art Project Uganda (...
This article explores the capacity of visual arts to deal with transnational, multidirectional proce...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Imagination and creativity in African cities is not always marked by rebellion, resistance, and crit...
Several artists have been occupied with the subject of decolonization in Namibia lately. By means of...
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Why promote contemporary African art as "contemporary African art"? Doing so means to have a project...
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The emergence of visual art spaces over the past few decades on the African continent invites art pr...
This is a Thesis which is practice-based research project aimed to explore borders for art productio...
The article explores the critical discourse developing in contemporary African art around issues of ...
Masters in Fine Art by Research Wits School of Art (Division of Fine Art) January 2016The Ugandan ...
Socially-engaged art practices are understood to borrow from several disciplinary territories where ...
In this paper I undertake a review of Dak‟Art 2012. An engagement of this kind is considered pertine...
This paper seeks to consider some specific aspects of contemporary art, specifically contemporary Af...
This article examines two socially engaged Ugandan art projects: the Disability Art Project Uganda (...
This article explores the capacity of visual arts to deal with transnational, multidirectional proce...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Imagination and creativity in African cities is not always marked by rebellion, resistance, and crit...
Several artists have been occupied with the subject of decolonization in Namibia lately. By means of...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Why promote contemporary African art as "contemporary African art"? Doing so means to have a project...
This article reflects on the role and relevance of the Lubumbashi Biennial (DR Congo), taking into a...
The emergence of visual art spaces over the past few decades on the African continent invites art pr...
This is a Thesis which is practice-based research project aimed to explore borders for art productio...
The article explores the critical discourse developing in contemporary African art around issues of ...
Masters in Fine Art by Research Wits School of Art (Division of Fine Art) January 2016The Ugandan ...
Socially-engaged art practices are understood to borrow from several disciplinary territories where ...
In this paper I undertake a review of Dak‟Art 2012. An engagement of this kind is considered pertine...
This paper seeks to consider some specific aspects of contemporary art, specifically contemporary Af...