Tingatinga is a painting style that
developed in the second half of the 20th century in the Oyster Bay area in Dar es Salaam (Tanzania )
and later spread to most East Africa .
Tingatinga paintings are one of the most widely represented forms of
tourist-oriented art in Tanzania ,
Kenya
and neighboring countries. The genre is named after its founder, Tanzanian
painter Edward Said Tingatinga.
Tingatinga paintings are traditionally made
on masonite, using several layers of bicycle paint, which makes for a brilliant
and highly saturated colors. Many elements of the style are related to
requirements of the tourist-oriented market; for example, the paintings are
usually small so they can be easily transported, and subjects are intended to
appeal to the Europeans and Americans (e.g., the big five and other wild
fauna). In this sense, Tingatinga paintings can be considered a form of
"airport art". The drawings themselves can be described as both naïve
and caricatural, and humor and sarcasm are often explicit.
History
Edward Tingatinga began painting around
1968 in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam ). He
employed low cost materials such as masonite and bicycle paint and attracted
the attention of tourists for their colorful, both naïve and surrealistic
style. When Tingatinga died in 1972, his style was so popular that it had
started a wide movement of imitators and followers, sometimes informally
referred to as the "Tingatinga school".
The first generation of artists from the
Tingatinga school basically reproduced the works of the school's founder. In
the 1990s new trends emerged within the Tingatinga style, in response to the
transformations that the Tanzanian society was undergoing after independence.
New subjects related to the new urban and multi-ethnic society of Dar es Salaam
(e.g., crowded and busy streets and squares) were introduced, together with
occasional technical novelties (such as the use of perspective). One of the
most well known second-generation Tingatinga painters is Edward Tingatinga's
brother-in-law, Simon Mpata.
Because of his short artistic life,
Tingatinga left only a relatively small number of paintings, which are
sought-after by collectors. Today it is known that fakes were produced from all
famous Tingatinga paintings like The lion, Peacock on the Baobab Tree,
Antelope, Leopard, Buffalo ,
or Monkey.
Influences
It is controversial whether Tingatinga's
style is completely original or a derivative of traditional art forms of East Africa . In his seminal paper Tingatinga and His
Followers, Swedish art critic Berit Sahlström claimed that Tingatinga was of
Mozambican origin and thus suggested that his style might have connections with
modern Mozambican art. The claim that Tingatinga was of Mozambican descent is
nevertheless rejected by most scholars and by the Tingatinga Society. Art
trader Yves Goscinny suggested that Edward Tingatinga might have been
influenced by Congolese paintings that were sold in Dar es Salaam at his times. The source of
this claim could be some articles by Merit Teisen, where she also claims that
Tingatinga decorated two house walls for payment before he started painting on
masonite boards.
The claim by Teisen about Tingatinga
decorating house walls might also be interpreted as a clue of another origin of
Tingatinga's art, namely the traditional hut wall decorations of Makua and
Makonde people. These paintings were first witnessed by Karl Heule in 1906 and
described in his book Negerleben in Deutsch-Ost Afrika. Also ethnologist Jesper
Kirknaes and Japanese art curator Kenji Shiraishi, as well as modern
travellers, have seen and documented these paintings in several locations of
southern Tanzania, including Ngapa, a village where many relatives of
Tingatinga's father still live today.
Jesper Kirknaes also documented those
painting being done in Dar es Salaam
by Makua and Makonde migrants. Shiraishi is one of the scholars who most firmly
supported the theory that Tingatinga's art is connected to traditional Makua
wall paintings. Among other considerations, Shiraishi observed that it is
unlikely that a style emerged and spread so quickly over most East
Africa without any connection to traditional art. He claimed that
his studies provided evidence for this claim.
In 2010 Hanne Thorup interviewed Tingatinga
student Omari Amonde, who confirmed that Tingatinga used to paint on hut walls
as a young boy (around 12 years old).
Further elaborating on the Makua painting
hypothesis, Shiraishi also suggested a connection between hut walls painting
and traditional rock paintings, an art form that in Africa
has continued past stone age to at least the 19th century. Based on this
connection, Shiraishi concludes that Tingatinga art might be seen as the
"longest artist trend ever".
The Tingatinga Arts Cooperative Society
After Tingatinga's death, his direct 6
followers Ajaba Abdallah Mtalia, Adeusi Mandu, January Linda, Casper Tedo,
Simon Mpata, and Omari Amonde tried to
organize themselves. Relatives of Tingatinga also joined this group, which
would be later called the "Tingatinga (or Tinga Tinga) Partnership".
Not all of Tingatinga followers agreed to be in the partnership; some created a
new group at Slipway. In 1990, the Tingatinga Partnership constituted itself
into a society, renamed to Tingatinga Arts Cooperative Society (TACS). While
the TACS is usually recognized as the most authoritative representative of the
Tingatinga heritage, only a small fraction of Tingatinga artists are directly
linked to this society.
Tingatinga and George Lilanga
Although the internationally acclaimed
Tanzanian artist George Lilanga was not a student of the Tingatinga school, nor
a member of the Tingatinga Society, he's known to have frequented Tingatinga
artists, and some influence of Tingatinga is evident in his work, for what
concerns painting (an art form that Lilanga approached in 1974). This influence
has been recognized by Lilanga himself in an interview with Kenji Shiraishi,
specifically in reference to the use of enamel paint and square hardboards.
Besides using materials and techniques originally adopted by Tingatinga
painters, Lilanga's art resembles Tingatinga also in its use of vibrant colors
and its composition style, that shares the same horror vacui of Tingatinga art.
It has been suggested that Lilanga (who was originally a sculptor) actually
learned to paint from Tingatinga painters such as Noel Kapanda and later
Mchimbi Halfani, who collaborated with him. The collaboration between Lilanga
and Kapanda lasted several years.
Source From Wikipedia
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