Makonde art
The name Makonde art refers to East African sculptures or, less frequently, to modern paintings created by craftspeople or artists belonging to the Makonde people of northern Mozambique and southern Tanzania, separated by the Ruvuma river. Art historians, dealers and collectors have created this genre of African art, that can be subdivided into African traditional artifacts or modern artistic works. This genre can be traced back to the 1930s, when the first documented exhibition of Makonde art was held at the Centro Cultural dos Novos in the former Portuguese colony of today's Mozambique.
Traditional and contemporary styles
Makonde art can be subdivided into different styles. Traditionally, the Makonde have carved secular household objects, ritual figures and masks. After the 1930s, Portuguese colonizers and other missionaries arrived at the Mueda plateau in Northern Mozambique. They showed great interest and fascination for the Makonde wood carvings and began to order different pieces, from religious to political “eminences.” The Makonde sculptors, after noticing such interest, decided to carve sculptures in a new style, using pau-preto and pau-rosa instead of the soft and not long-lasting wood they had used before. This first contact with Western culture has been considered to be the introduction of European styles into the tradition of Makonde carving.Since the 1930s, the so-called Modern Makonde Art has been developed in Tanzania. An essential step away from the traditional sculptures was the creation of abstract figures, representing mostly evil spirits, called Shetani in Swahili language, that play a special role in Swahili popular beliefs. This shetani style was created in the early 1950s by master carver Samaki Likankoa, whose patron Mohamed Peera, an art curator in Dar es Salaam played an instrumental and decisive role in influencing the modern Makonde art movement. Some Makonde sculptors, of whom the best known is George Lugwani, have embraced a fully abstract style of carving without discernible figures. Since the 1970s, Modern Makonde Art has become part of the internationally recognized contemporary art of Africa. The most acknowledged such artist was George Lilanga, who started with carvings and became famous as a modern painter.
A special genre of traditional ritual Makonde art are the characteristic Mapiko masks. These have been used in tribal dances accompanying coming-of-age rituals since before contact was made with missionaries in the 19th century. These masks were carved from a single block of light wood and may represent shetani spirits, ancestors, or living characters. The dancers wore them so that they could see through the mask's mouth or alternatively, fixed the mask on their heads, with the mask facing straight towards the audience, when the dancers bent forward.
Changes in the 20th century
Modern Makonde art is an integration of dated practices of woodwork met with a demand of artistic woodcarving of the modernized world. After the introduction of road systems in the plateaus between Tanzania and Mozambique by Portuguese troops during World War I, the traditional sense of the practice began to shift to meet new social and economic demands. Portuguese forced labor and taxes had prompted Makonde carvers in Mozambique to expand the practices of traditional woodcarving. Once a tradition of ritual expression made solely by men and kept hidden from women, Western influences on 20th-century Makonde art changed both the production and purpose of this art style.Another reason for Makonde sculptors originally from Mozambique, but displaced in Tanzania, was their support of the resistance towards colonial regime in Mozambique. As early as 1959, Makonde people in Dar-es-Salaam helped create the nationalist organisation that later became part of the Mozambique Liberation Front. Supporting the fight for liberation, Makonde sculptors created cooperatives and made financial contributions by selling their artworks for the struggle for liberation in Mozambique. Referring to notions of modern Makonde carvers as traditional, rural people, a Portuguese study of 2020 said: "To generically place the Makonde artists in isolation, in the corner and in the bush, is a Western paternalist fiction."