M HKA gaat digitaal

Met M HKA Ensembles zetten we onze eerste échte stappen in het digitale landschap. Ons doel is met behulp van nieuwe media de kunstwerken nog beter te kaderen dan we tot nu toe hebben kunnen doen.

We geven momenteel prioriteit aan smartphones en tablets, m.a.w. de in-museum-ervaring. Maar we zijn evenzeer hard aan het werk aan een veelzijdige desktop-versie. Tot het zover is vind je hier deze tussenversie.

M HKA goes digital

Embracing the possibilities of new media, M HKA is making a particular effort to share its knowledge and give art the framework it deserves.

We are currently focusing on the experience in the museum with this application for smartphones and tablets. In the future this will also lead to a versatile desktop version, which is now still in its construction phase.

L.G. Damas, ed., "Latitudes Françaises Volume I: Poètes d'Expression Française [d'Afrique Noire, Madagascar, Réunion, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Indochine, Guyane] 1900 - 1945, 1947

Book, 19,2 x 14,2 x 2,2 cm.

scan: © M HKA, Published by Éditions du Seuil

Collection: Collection M HKA, Antwerp.

Léon-Gontran Damas (1912-1978) was a French poet, politician, and one of the founders of the Négritude movement together with Aimé Césaire and Léopold Senghor. This anthology was published in 1947 a year before Senghor’s pivotal work Anthologie de la nouvelle poésienègre et malgache de langue française (Anthology of New Negro and Malagasy Poetry in French) and served as a manifesto for the movement. It contains poems by French-speaking authors from six regions: Sub-Saharan Africa, The Antilles (Guadeloupe and Martinique), Guyana, Indochina, Madagascar and Réunion island, with many of the poems published for the first time. The publication is significant in a political sense as it represents an attempt by colonial-era writers to deconstruct and transform French language and culture, in order to create a new and authentic poetic language and culture, “equal and fraternal to the French one”. In the introduction, Damas pays tribute to Étienne Léro (1910-1939), who is considered to be the first French poet of African descent to publicly identify himself as a Surrealist. Surrealism, with its ideas of refusal of bourgeois society and its privilege of the unconscious in its quest for freedom and self-fulfilment, was adopted by some Négritude theoreticians. Moreover, it provided them with an emancipatory approach to the language. Forging nouns, inventing names (like the term Négritude itself), breaking with orthodoxies and introducing new rhythms and styles of typography, they sought to find the ways to transform the coloniser’s language into a language of their own.

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Exhibitions & Ensembles

> Exhibition: MONOCULTURE | A Recent History. M HKA, Antwerpen, 25 September 2020 - 25 April 2021.

> Ensemble: MONOCULTURE – ARTEFACTS.

> Ensemble: MONOCULTURE – Négritude books.

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> Ensemble: NÉGRITUDE.