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| MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY ART |
The oldest and most consistent of Sudanese modern and contemporary art
is the art of the tribes. The Sudanese tribal life has always been the
least responsive to change. Art of the tribes of the Sudan shows great
reservation and conservatism. This entire heritage, past and present, constitutes the base on which
the modern Sudanese artistic practices are deeply grafted. This is why
Sudanese contemporary art, stands out among the different African schools
of art as unique. When the Turks invaded Sudan in 1824, Mohamed Ali Pasha, who was very
keen on the modernization of the Nile Valley, introduced the Modern Elementary
Education, yet he based the experience on the traditional (khalwa) school. The change came when some of the pioneer graduates of Gordon Memorial
College went overseas for further studies. But they soon came to discover
that the works of art could only exist between the old and new, between
convention and revolution within a certain society. This is why some pioneer
artists where culturally frustrated in Europe. They naturally failed to
be part of the European mainstream art. They started to drift away from
it, and began to try things on their own.
Contemporary Sudanese art world did not experience a war of styles, or
strong schools other than (Khartoum School). Nevertheless, there is a
relatively strong art movement, which is highly experimental. In its own
way this movement is modernist and seeking to globalize in spite of the
rather restrictive conditions under which hundreds of Sudanese artists
are working. |
| Arts and crafts |
| Many crafts are available in Sudans souks (markets). Strings of
heavy beads often include antique trading beads made from coloured glass.
The traditional wraps in bright, printed cotton, worn by women, are mostly
imported. Many traders make their goods in the marketplace: old tin cans are cut and soldered into cooking pans and lamps; tailors make up the loose white gowns worn by men; and leather is punched and stitched into bags and saddles for donkeys and camels. |