User:Venusianscholar/Emile Guebehi/Bibliography

Emile Guebehi "Master of Nekede" (1937 - 2008) was a sculptor born in Nekede, Nigeria. He worked and died in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

His artworks are part of The Jean Pigozzi Collection of African Art and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Guebehi has been featured in museums across the world from the Hood Museum of Art to the Musée du quai Branly.

Biography
Emile Guebehi is a self-taught artist.

Before working as a sculptor, he worked in manual labor jobs. He returned to his native village in his thirties and focused on creating art. A local healer in the village of Nekede convinced him to focus his time practicing art and even commissioned a wooden figurine for use in his consultations. Guebehi worked with mediums such as clay, coal, and occasionally fashioned cement figures for tombs. However, he dedicated himself to wood carving. He was based in the capital of the Ivory Coast, Abidjan. The Tchaman or Ebrié people offered to settle him in the village Songon-Dagbé after the village and the village prefect were impressed with Guebehi's art presentation. The Ebrié Lagoon commissioned art for age-grade ceremonies, dance groups, and for families organizing gold displays, and the "Feast of Generations". He was one of the first Ivorian artists who modernized Ebrié Lagoon anthropomorphic sculptures to more realistic portrayals of unclothed African women.

Guebehi introduced his brother, Nicolás Damas, to his own method of polychrome wood sculpture. They often collaborated in creating large mulitcolored scenes representing the characters, animals, objects related to the daily life, the history of the population, the origin of the Ebriés and their initiation rites.

Artworks

 * Untitled (Adultery Scene), 1991
 * Untitled (Bar Scene), 1991
 * Untitled (Musician's Scene), 1991
 * Standing Man with a Record Album, 1999
 * Dancing Woman, 1999

Group Exhibitions
Black Womanhood: Images, Icons, and Ideologies of the African Body


 * Curated by Barabara Thompson, the exhibition displayed at the Hood Museum of Art on the campus of Dartmouth College surveyed the historical construction of stereotypes concerning the black female body, such as the erotic harem slave, the maternal mammy, and the hyper-sexualized black woman.

Clubs of Bamako


 * The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and the Rice University Moody Center for the Arts collaborated in curating the Club of Bamako. An exhibition of sixteen black and white photographs of the nightclub scene in Bamako, Mali, in the 1960s and 1970s are shown with eleven life-size sculptures featuring two Emile Guebehi sculptures: Dancing Woman and Standing Man with a Record Album.

Masters of Sculpture from Ivory Coast


 * The Jean Pigozzi Collection of African Art lent the Musée du quai Branly Emile Guebehi's and Nicolas Damas' Untitled (Adultery Scene) sculpture to [shed] light on the unique and diverse styles created by older regional groups and today's "transnational" African artists.

Magical Africa – Masks and Sculptures from Ivory Coast


 * The exhibition is a touring exhibition featuring forty-nine artists, spanning from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century, who have developed art in the Ivory Coast. Together the masks and sculptures – most made of wood, some of ivory – will astound the viewer with the power and authenticity of African sculpting tradition.