Donna Kukama, We do not expect you to believe in us, 2020 - detail

PIASA is honoured to partner with the Moleskine Foundation to present this exceptional curated selection of works by African and Africa diaspora artists, generously provided to support the Foundation’s mission to leverage creativity as a powerful force for social change. The Africa + Modern and Contemporary Art auction includes 6 works selected with the advice of the internationally acclaimed curator Simon Njami.

The selection features five extraordinary artists, Theo Eshetu, Mwangi Hutter, Donna Kukama, Maurice Pefura and Andrew Tshabangu, who have generously contributed works for the auction. With the aim of nurturing the entire art ecosystem, 50% of the sales will go to the artist and 50% will serve to support the Foundation’s mission. PIASA will be waiving its commission on the sales, as its contribution to the initiative.

100% of the funds received by the Moleskine Foundation will directly support young creative minds from underserved communities who are at the center of the Foundation’s unconventional educational programs.

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“I could not have imagined a selection of artists more capable of giving an idea of the intrinsic reality of what is today called "Contemporary African Art". ”

Simon Njami — curator

The Contemporaneity of the world

I could not have imagined a selection of artists more capable of giving an idea of the intrinsic reality of what is today called “Contemporary African Art”. The origins, the techniques, the times and the subjects addressed show that it is wrong to think that African creation is uniform. And if all question the problematic concept of identity, it is never in a Manichean and essentialist way, quite the contrary. They open the way to a personal quest which, in these troubled times, is the only one worthwhile. Their work comes as an answer to that old question stated by Ernst Bloch, the essential questions, this “Self and We-problem”. The We is a notion that transcends borders and histories, even within Africa itself. It can only be experienced as a choir of soloists. And the very fact that they have all agreed to participate in this charity auction demonstrates, if proof were needed, that we cannot think of ourselves as outside of the world, and that art remains perhaps the only place where difference can be celebrated. From South Africa to Ethiopia to Cameroon, they redefine the emotional map of a world whose foundations are shaking. The rumour of a different world that swells from Africa begins to make itself audible in the four corners of the world, in an organic wave, a salutary wave. It is no longer a question of return but of departure, of departures, towards other forms, other philosophies, other ways of envisioning the “living together” beaten in breach by all the nauseating nationalisms. And if I felt an immense pleasure to work with each of the artists gathered here, it is because, in my eyes, they incarnate the quintessence of the contemporaneity of a world which refuses to be subjected to the claws of globalization.

— Simon Njami