Tanzania is at The Dawn of a Cultural Awakening

AN IMPORTANT AND UNIQUE CULTURAL HERITAGE RESCUED

Knowledge is at the heart of social and economic growth. Knowledge relies heavily on shared cultural heritage and on openness to the unknown. To that end, artists have a special role as social barometers, as promoters of change and as repository of tradition…
(Marina Galvani, Tanzania Knowledge is at the heart of development—A letter from the head curator of the World Bank art program to the National Arts Council)

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They say ‘a journey of a thousand miles begin with a single step’. The initiative to rescue a piece of Tanzania’s cultural heritage, the late George Lilanga’s stucco portico and Shetani gates that graced the entrance to Nyumba ya Sanaa (Swahili for ‘House of Art’), is evidence for one of the many first steps that the Tanzanian public seem to (of late) be taking towards its journey to a cultural awakening.

Until very recently, and despite its attempt to develop a comprehensive cultural policy (Sera ya Utamaduni—1997) with specific strategies for art promotion (visual art included), Tanzania remained one of the least developed visual art scenes amongst developing countries with a rather rudimentary sense of art appreciation. Tanzanian art and artists have also been, generally, the least (re)presented in major hubs for contemporary art—like art biennales, major international exhibitions, art fairs, etc.—internationally (and including the ones that take place on the continent). This ‘underperformance’ in the field is, arguably, one of the manifestations of the extent to which there is a gap between the Cultural Policy as a ‘statement of intent’ and its implementation and a reflection of the fact that the great majority of creative and cultural productions in Tanzania had for the longest time taken place in an environment in which there is little or no coherent strategy for investment in education and training.

Visual art has for the longest time been, to most Tanzanians, considered as a craft—a mere hobby that just about anyone could learn. And not surprising, considering the fact that it is not until university level that art is (seriously) taught as a subject—in lower levels, elements of art skills are integrated in vocational skills subject, which teachers complain they have no skills to teach and therefore chances for a few gifted children with parents who appreciate art happen in a few circles and outside the schools. It is, perhaps, for this reason that there had been an absence of the necessary policies that would secure the art sector, and its development, as beneficial and sustainable activity.

Artists occupy a very peculiar place in class structure. Working with our hands and consuming a great amount of time and materials creating objects, we are laborers… laborers to a culture whose community we some day hope to see evolve to love and appreciate art. The discomfort that I, as Tanzanian artist, associate with laboring for my art somehow gets pushed further and further away and the labor starts to feel well worth it when I see Tanzanian art beginning to gain recognition as our society starts to appreciate art more and more these days. This could, perhaps, be a result of the exposure brought about by projects and events initiated and/or supported by the “donor” community – the EU Commission, the British Council, Alliance Française, Goethe Institute Tanzania, and the Russian Cultural Centre among others; and personal initiatives that provide workshops, trainings, exchanges, exhibitions and other public involving events and activities offered by art practitioners and professionals through various NGOs and arts networks – the likes of Nafasi Art Space.

Long before any of these initiatives ever existed, the late ‘Baba wa Taifa’ (Father of the Nation) Mwl. Julius Kambarage Nyerere established Nyumba ya Sanaa in 1974, positioning it in the middle of Dar es Salaam to ensure sustainability of art, and to create opportunities for artists to produce and survive on their own. He believed that if it could be efficiently utilized, it would reduce the artists’ begging syndrome to donors and the state, which enslaves them. Nyumba ya Sanaa was for the longest time, the leading center for art in Dar es Salaam and was responsible for some very big names in Tanzanian visual art like Augustino Malaba, Robino Ntila, Lutengano Mwakisopile… just to mention a few.

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The late George Lilanga, one of the most famous and internationally acclaimed Tanzanian artists, a visual art giant in his own right, began his career at Nyumba ya Sanaa and went on to become a major representatives in the field to the point where his paintings and sculptures are often featured on the cover of many reference books dealing with the subject. His works have travelled the world and even form a part of several museums and private permanent collection (e.g. the Jean Pigozzi collection). He was an all rounded artist who succeeded in using a distinctive traditional imaginary and making of it an art of universal appeal. His sculptures, reliefs and paintings have been the (un)conscious inspiration for many artists in the world and mostly in Europe and the US. As many attribute to African traditional art the sparking flame that initiated the modernist movement with Picasso and Cezanne, Lilanga is the icon (representing Tanzania) of creativity and originality that sparks from different parts of Africa to ignite the world of art.

It is quite unfortunate and rather saddening that after his death and, later, the demolition and relocation of Nyumba ya Sanaa to its new premises where it largely suspended its role as a cultural center, the late Lilanga’s stucco portico and Shetani gates that he created for the entrance to (and as face of) Nyumba ya Sanaa—one of the emblematic symbols of Dar es Salaam and the only venture of the artist into monumental/mural art—had been dismantled and was in danger of being destroyed. At the moment, this unique heritage has been catalogued and is being preserved at the National House of Culture. This is after some of it was removed from the new Nyumba ya Sanaa premise and the rest of it was rescued from the port just as it was about to get shipped off to Germany after being sold off for 50USD per piece under Nyumba ya Sanaa’s authority. Efforts are now under way to preserve the portico as a centerpiece of a living cultural space, to be restored within the National House of Culture, under the aegis of UNESCO and advisory support from the World Bank cultural heritage specialists and Swedish experts.

The National House of Culture is alleged to, at the moment, be facing a resource crunch to an extent that it is forced to overcharge the rate for its exhibition halls so much that most artists are not even able to afford showing their works there and to rent out some of its acreage to weddings and other non-art related events. With this harsh reality, there is no telling what the fate of this unique heritage will be, but, through public mobilization there has, so far, been willingness for collaboration and support (financial and otherwise) from quite a few Tanzanian creatives, public and private organizations to ensure that plans are underway for the National House of Culture to transform the museum’s inner courtyard into a Lilanga courtyard—a space for art education and creative exchanges. This will not only raise the late Lilanga’s profile and legacy (which seems to be carried with the highest regard everywhere else but not so much in his own country) in particular, but also modern (and modernist) Tanzanian art in general. More and more people are showing interest to fundraise and join hands to show how much cultural heritage deserves to be cherished and protected as a way to support knowledge creation and preservation.

In many countries, the development and success in the visual art field is partly made possibly by support from the government, but largely carried by sponsors, collectors, etc. from within the community itself. As a Tanzanian artist, I find the fact that the Tanzanian community is beginning to care for the fate of visual art and is willing to front row in the steering of its development very encouraging. It is evidence that Tanzania is at the dawn of a ‘cultural awakening’. How long this ‘awakening’ will continue to spread is debatable, but the feeling so far is that there is no going back. The genie, finally, is out of the bottle!