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Exhibitions

The Otolith Group | Mascon: A Massive Concentration of Black Experiential Energy

09.27.2024 – 01.10.2025
A couple in silhouette holding an umbrella in a desert, with a line of soldiers in the background.

The Otolith Group, Mascon: A Massive Concentration of Black Experiential Energy, 2024. © The Otolith Group. Courtesy the artists, greengrassi and Project88.

Exhibition Summary

In the fall of 2024, the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society will present a new moving-image work by the Otolith Group titled Mascon: A Massive Concentration of Black Experiential Energy. The exhibition is conceived as a complement to a new mural commissioned for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Griffin Court, on view starting September 26. The images that form the building blocks of the mural are stills from the film.

Both installations are presented as part of a series of exhibitions and events linked to Panafrica: Histories, Aesthetics, Politics, a multi-year research project at the Neubauer Collegium that is exploring the links between Pan-African politics and culture. Together the Otolith Group’s mural and film essay serve as a prelude to Project a Black Planet: The Art and Culture of Panafrica, a major exhibition opening December 15 at the Art Institute that was informed by the research project and curated by members of the research team.

The artists describe Mascon as an “audiovisual investigation into the gestures, geometries, grammars, and geographies that compose the forms and forces of the films of Ousmane Sembène and Djibril Diop Mambéty.” Mascon consists of a mosaic of images extracted from the works of these two Senegalese directors, prominent figures among a generation of African auteurs whose films explored the emancipatory movements that swept across the continent in the late 1950s and early ’60s. According to the Otolith Group, their homage to these filmmakers “summons the borderless imagination of the cine-Sahel,” amplifying and distilling Sembène’s and Mambéty’s favored motifs in order to elicit what American literary scholar Stephen Henderson termed “mascon” (shorthand for “a massive concentration of black experiential energy”).

Curated by Dieter Roelstraete

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