SYMPOSIUM TO EXAMINE WAYS OF HONORING ANCESTORS IN AFRICA AND THE DIASPORA

The African Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison will host its annual spring symposium on the topic of honoring the departed in Africa and beyond.

Scheduled for April 6-7, 2018, the multidisciplinary symposium will feature examples of arts and actions used by cultures to mourn and celebrate ancestors.

Henry Drewal, symposium organizer and Evjue-Bascom Professor of Art History and Afro-American Studies, asked all speakers to perform their presentations.

“Honoring the departed is a universal human activity,” Drewal said. “I am interested not just in the visual arts, but in how we perform these arts in music, dance, and rituals.”

A number of alumni will return to campus to present at the two-day symposium. Eric Adjetey Anang, third-generation coffin-maker from Ghana and former Windgate Artist in Residence at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, will showcase his designer creations and the one in the Chazen Museum of Art.

“I want to highlight issues that are distant, culturally, as well as issues that are present in our daily lives,” Drewal said. He noted that the symposium will also explore violence and death of African Americans in the United States, themes that are part of this larger story.

A performance by the Egúngún masqueraders from the Oyotunji African Village in South Carolina will headline the first day of the symposium. The weekend will conclude with a dance party featuring the West African and Afro Peruvian rhythms of Chicago Afrobeat Project and Golpe Tierra at The Sett-Union South.

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