Gallery fills creative void for artists amid island's struggles
The Guardian Weekly|February 09, 2024
In a country ravaged by food and health emergencies, art is vital, said Hobisoa Raininoro.
Saeed Kamali Dehghan
Gallery fills creative void for artists amid island's struggles

"It is important to bring a note of hope, to show beauty, creativity, and provide nourishment for the mind and imagination," added the co-curator of the inaugural exhibition at Madagascar's first major contemporary art venue, Fondation H.

Until last year, Madagascar had a vibrant art scene but no public museum of modern art or art school. Then, in April - after two years of restoration - a former post office in the capital, Antananarivo, opened its doors as Fondation H's new gallery.

Its first exhibition, Bientôt je vous tisse tous (Soon I will weave you all), runs until the end of February, and has been dedicated to Zoarinivo Razakaratrimo, a doyenne of Malagasy art. Known as Madame Zo, her work has been exhibited across the world and acquired by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art in Washington.

The Fondation H exhibition is the first time the textile artist, who died in 2020, has been showcased at such scale in her homeland.

Madame Zo was famous for her use of weaving, an ancestral tradition that continues to flourish. Her work drew inspiration from lamba, a wrap made of silk or cotton worn by both sexes in Madagascar and used by mothers to tie newborns to their backs and as a burial shroud.

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