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The diverse, fantastical art of Africa goes on show From the fantastical to Largest exhibition of African art shows Europe's largest exhibition of African art opens today

Martin Hodgson
Wednesday 09 February 2005 20:02 EST
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THE LARGEST exhibition of contemporary African art to be held in Europe opens today with the launch of the Africa Remix show at the Hayward Gallery in London.

Works by 75 artists from 23 countries across the continent will be on display. Organisers say the exhibition will challenge common perceptions of Africa.

The curator, Simon Njami, said the show showed the breathtaking diversity of African art and music, from Nigerian "junk art" and Egyptian video installations, to Algerian hip-hop and Malian harp music.

"There is no single idea of Africa and, therefore, there is no single idea of African art. This exhibition shows individual African artists have a great talent to share with the world," he said yesterday.

Africa Remix is the focus of a season of cultural events involving 42 museums, galleries, concert halls and cinemas. Co-ordinated by the British Museum, the South Bank Centre and the Arts Council of England, the programme aims to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors in the coming year to Britain's largest celebration of African art.

The season coincides with a political focus on Africa driven by the UK holding the G8 chair and the EU presidency.

Works on display range in character from the fantastical to the documentary: A Congolese sculptor, Bodys Isek Kingelez, creates obsessively detailed images of utopian cities, while a photographer from South Africa, David Goldblatt, focuses on the contrast in the lives of the continent's rich and poor.

Other works on display include an eight-metre high "cloth of gold" fashioned from thousands of bottle tops by the Ghanaian artist El Anatsui, and the bizarre animal-headed figures of a South African sculptor, Jane Alexander. In an echo of the country's bloody recent history, the Mozambican sculptor Goncalo Mabunda welds guns into monumental sculptures, including a towering rusty tree and a recreation of the Eiffel Tower.

Other events in the festival will include a fashion show at the V&A, films at the National Film Theatre, street festivals in Carnaby Street and a concert at the Royal Festival Hall by the Senegalese hip-hop artist MC Solaar.

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