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Cantor's 'Mami Wata' exhibition spotlights the art of Pan-Africa

The exhibition culminates decades of research on the "in your face" spiritual presence who roams the art of the African diaspora.

Jack Hubbard

"Mami Wata: Arts for Water Spirits in Africa and Its Diasporas" explores 500 years of visual cultures and histories of the water deity.

BY CYNTHIA HAVEN

In the summer of 1975, Henry John Drewal recalled, he "heard Mami's call and had to answer." At that point, he became a man if not obsessed, at least heavily preoccupied with a water spirit.

The epiphany occurred as Drewal was traveling in eastern Ghana. He saw a striking shrine mural – a triptych painted on a wall – that portrayed a beautiful mermaid sitting on a rock and combing her hair. She was framed by images of the Hindu deities Lakshmi and Krishna.

A passerby in Ghana explained that the image was "Mami Wata," or Mother Water – a powerful and awe-inspiring water spirit who dwells in the Volta River. But Drewal, guest curator of an art exhibition devoted to Mami, found out that she was far from a local deity. Mami Wata melded the worlds of mermaids, snake charmers, Brazilian Indian heroes, astrological figures, the Kongo ancestors of Brazil and the gods of India and West Africa.

"From that day forward every turn I took seemed to bring me face to face with Mami Wata," he wrote in a catalog for the Cantor Art Center's current exhibition.

"Mami Wata: Arts for Water Spirits in Africa and Its Diasporas," on display from Aug. 4 through Jan. 2, 2011, explores 500 years of visual cultures and histories of the water deity through sculpture, paintings, masks and altars from west and central Africa, the Caribbean, Brazil and the United States. Admission is free.

The colorful and provocative exhibition, which began at UCLA's Fowler Museum and continued to the Smithsonian Institution and other venues, concludes at Stanford.

L.A. Cicero The finishing touches were put on an altar to Santa Marta constructed in the Cantor Arts Center by Gassia Armenian, curatorial and research associate for the Fowler Museum at UCLA. The altar is a part of the exhibit 'Mami Wata: Arts for Water Spirits in Africa and Its Diasporas.'

The finishing touches were put on an altar to Santa Marta constructed in the Cantor Arts Center by Gassia Armenian, curatorial and research associate for the Fowler Museum at UCLA. The altar is a part of the exhibit 'Mami Wata: Arts for Water Spirits in Africa and Its Diasporas.'

Holland Cotter's New York Times review of the exhibition was euphoric: "It's as rousing as a drum roll, as piquant as a samba, as sexy as Cesaria Evora's voice. It's about glitter and tears, bawdy jokes and baskets of flowers, miracles and mysteries, money in hand and affairs of the heart. It's about standing at the edge of the sea at dawn and watching a world re-born. In that world no one walks; everyone dances and swims; everyone, that is, who has taken the plunge into Mami Wata's realm."

Certainly the 1975 encounter in Ghana proved life-changing for Drewal, a professor of art history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Not surprising: He claims Mami is an "in your face" spiritual presence. He met her everywhere. He traveled to Nigeria, Benin, Puerto Rico and Brazil to document devotion to her. He found contemporary artists throughout Africa and the African diaspora who dedicate their works to her.

Images of water spirits have existed in Africa for centuries – from the Niger Delta to Sierra Leone and the Bissagos Islands. Sailors and merchants to the continent introduced the mermaid and snake charmer, infusing existing iconography with a new spirit. The diaspora in the New World gave her new powers of healing and problem solving. She remains beautiful and dangerous, seductive and protective.

"While there are many ways to understand historical and contemporary Africa, the portrayal of a spirit through her many incarnations across cultures, spaces and times is one of the most compelling," Marla C. Berns and Mary Nooter Roberts of the Fowler Museum write in a foreword to the catalog. "The histories of migration and enslavement that define the earliest waves of diasporic movement are made tangible through the connecting thread of a miraculous being who can change the world with the flip of her tail."

The Cantor Arts Center is open Wednesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday to 8 p.m. For museum information, call (650) 723-4177.

Media Contact

Cynthia Haven, Stanford News Service: (650) 724-6184, cynthia.haven@stanford.edu

Anna Koster, Cantor Arts Center: (650) 725-4657, akoster@stanford.edu