(piano music) - [voiceover] We are in
the museum of African Art part of the Smithsonian on the Mall in Washington, D.C. and we're looking at a
spectacular wall hanging by a very well known contemporary african artist from Ghana. - [voiceover] This work is by El Anatsui who, while born in Ghana and raised there, spent most of his time as an artist in Nsukka, Nigeria. We're looking at a recent work which is at first glance, a textile. - [voiceover] And textile
is important in Ghana and has a long history. We're probably most
familiar with Kente cloth. - [voiceover] The
predominant color in Kente is gold, which was
associated with royalty, and the Ashanti control of the gold trade. And so El Anatsui is
using gold in this work to give it that sense of royal reverence and authority. - [voiceover] What we're looking at are small pieces of metal that are reclaimed most often from liquor bottles that have been pounded and then wired together, which returns us to traditional
West African culture, the importance of alcohol
and of the libation. - [voiceover] In many traditional
societies in West Africa there is a strong belief
in the importance of venerating and honoring ancestors, especially when one eats. And so before taking that first bite or that first drink, you pour libations, you pour a bit of palm wine, or some other kind of alcohol, to the ancestors just by dribbling a bit onto the ground. And so we have a reference here to that tradition. - [voiceover] This was refuse and what the artist has done is to collect these items and transform them now into something that has powerful meaning and is stunningly beautiful. - [voiceover] This sculpture, this textile was made up of pieces that
is smaller square sheets of this material that
would have been created by El Anatsui, and today more so by men he employs in his workshop
who create these squares and then lay them out. El Anatsui will often climb up on a ladder or look from above to figure out how to arrange them and put them together. And he may travel with
this piece and put it up or it might just be
shipped and it's really up to the curator how
it's going to be hung. So in each new location it
takes on a different form. Notice it's not flat. It really is intended to be sculptural and come out into our space. - [voiceover] I'm really
interested in the idea that this was something
that was done not only by the artist, but also by his workshop in the west we often think of that as detracting from the value
of the object because the artist is not solely
responsible for the work. But in African culture,
traditional cloth was often a more communal activity. - [voiceover] Absolutely,
and so El Anatsui, while we want that name
to be recognized with this piece of modern
art, really acknowledges that there are other
people that come together to make this possible. One thing that he also mentioned is that these objects have had a life before, and in fact they've been
touched and handled and manipulated by someone, and that harkens back to the belief system, you can find this among
the Ashanti for example, this idea of sunsum, or an aura or an energy that gets
transferred into objects that people handle most often. So it has an energy, an electricity, a sort of vitality of this history. - [voiceover] Those
words, energy, vitality, are so appropriate just
visually to the surface. Look at the way the light plays over, you called it sculptural,
it is not a flat surface. It intentionally bulges. There are valleys and hills
and our eye rides over this really sensuous surface. - [voiceover] We have to
remember that this is recyclia, this is a piece that is
completely recycled from materials that would've otherwise ended up in large trash heaps just outside
of almost any major city in Africa. El Anatsui is using his
traditional visual vocabulary, his heritage, to make sense of this very complicated idea of consumerism and capitalism, that is such a part of people's lives in Africa today. (piano music)