PRESS RELEASE

 

 

 

Tingatinga: Kitsch or Quality

Bicycle enamel on hard board and canvas

 

The Round Tower, Copenhagen - July 3 – August 22, 2010

 

An exhibition of brilliantly coloured, cheeky bicycle enamel paintings from Tanzania.

 

The extraordinary tale of Edward Saidi Tingatinga, who converted his courtyard into a painting workshop forty years ago, creating the unique paintings style, which later came to bear his name.

 

The Beginnings Of An African Art Style

In 1968 Edward Saidi Tingatinga was struggling to support his family, having only odd jobs that provided no regular income. In desperation for more income and inspired by the sight of tourists buying small, sugary paintings on the streets of Dar es Salaam, he converted his kitchen courtyard into a workshop and began to paint. He used what was at hand – high gloss bicycle paints and inexpensive ceiling boards, on which he painted simple renditions of the animals of his childhood.

A stray bullet killed Tingatinga in 1972. He had painted for only four years when he died, but his distinctive style marked the beginning of an African painting style that has been carried forward by painters till this day.

 

Wild Animals And Big City Life

The Round Tower exhibition shows the development from the early beginnings till today, where the third generation of Tingatinga painters carry forward the Tingatinga style with new, cheeky, colourful and witty motifs and detailed compositions. Tingatinga himself only painted extremely simple motives, often a lone animal on a monochrome background. In contrast today’s canvases are filled by an explosion of animals and birds. New motives have been added, ranging from village tales to city life, African fables, tropical fish, and wild life at the foot of snow clad Mount Kilimanjaro. The paints used are still high gloss enamel paints, giving the paintings their characteristic brilliant surface and the colourful, stylized, graphic expression so typical of the Tingatinga style.

 

Can Art Be Mass Produced?

Tingatinga: Kitsch or Quality presents an African art style, but also challenges the prevalent view of what constitutes quality art. What is the borderline between mass production and originality, between skill, craft and art? Today’s Tingatinga artists break all western norms on the uniqueness of a work of art. Tingatinga paintings are mass produced, copied and further developed, they provide a livelihood for hundreds of painters, and still artistic excellence prevails, questioning our perception and understanding of originality and art.

 

Tingatinga Cartoons

This special style of painting and the fables about African animals have now been made into a cartoon series for children, produced by BBC in cooperation with Walt Disney. The series is presently shown on CBeebies and will be shown on Danish television next year.

 

Time and Place:

The Round Tower, Copenhagen, Denmark. July 3 – August 23, 2010