Thinking about Curation: “Baya: Woman of Algiers”
Author Berkeley Arts + Design
Wednesday, August 30
Thinking about Curation: A case-study on making an exhibition
“Baya: Woman of Algiers”
with Natasha Boas
Natasha Boas, Independent curator, writer and scholar and co-professor of “Curation Across the Disciplines”
Independent curator, writer and scholar and co-professor of "Curation Across the Disciplines" will present her current curatorial work on the Algerian "outsider" woman artist Baya Mahieddine (1931–1998) known as Baya. This opening lecture offers a foundation to this year’s Big Ideas lectures on curation by exploring a case study in exhibition-making from context, to conception, to scholarship, to presentation. Baya’s works are in the collections of: the Musée de l'Art Brut, Lausanne; the Musée Picasso, Antibes; the Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris; the Musee national des beaux-arts d'Alger; the Musee national de Mali : as well as as many private collections in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East including the renown Fondation Barjeel. Woman of Algiers reexamines Baya’s career within a specifically Algerian post-colonial narrative along with Surrealism, contemporary North African art, Feminism, Mahgreb Studies and “outsider” art.
More info: Baya: Woman of Algiers is the first North American exhibition of works by the self-taught Algerian artist Baya Mahieddine (1931–1998). Known as Baya, she was born in Bordj el-Kiffan and orphaned at age five. Encouraged by her adoptive French mother to pursue art, she began as an adolescent to paint gouaches and make ceramics. Her work was soon discovered by fabled gallerist Adrien Maeght who, along with André Breton, organized an exhibition in Paris in 1947. Baya’s colorful depictions of women, rhythmic patterns, and bright palette drew the attention of Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, with whom she later collaborated in the renowned Madoura pottery studio in Vallauris. Celebrated in both Algeria and France, Baya has yet to gain international recognition. Woman of Algiers reexamines Baya’s career within Surrealist," outsider," and North-African post-colonial art contexts. The exhibition is curated by Natasha Boas and will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue.
Arts + Design Wednesdays @ BAMPFA is FREE and open to the public. Lectures are held at BAMPFA’s theater at 2155 Center Street in Berkeley, CA. Lectures start at 12:00pm and go to 1:30pm.
Arts + Design Wednesdays @ BAMPFA is organized and sponsored by the Arts + Design Initiative in partnership with Big Ideas Courses, with additional support from Cal Performances and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. In kind support is provided by BAMPFA.