Made in Porto-Novo
Artist: Romuald Hazoumè (Republic of Benin, born 1962)
Date: 2009
Dimensions:
H: 210 cm; W: 300 cm; Depth: 150 cm
Medium: Plastic canisters, various metals, and a wood platform
Classification: Sculpture
Credit Line: Purchased with funds given by Dorothy Mackenzie Price
Object number: 2013.159
Label Text:Materials are a way of connecting with people’s lives. Everything we use says something about us, and all the things we reject and throw away are still part of us, part of our lives in a way. My work is like a kind of modern-day archaeology.
Known for his masks made of found plastic canisters and vessels, Romuald Hazoumè’s MIP is an innovative installation piece shaped into four instruments of a band ensemble. The music composition that emits from the sculptural work is based on Hazoumè’s one-day record of the Kpayo Army’s activities (a group of illegal petroleum traffickers in Benin)—thus creating a soundscape literally “Made in Porto-Novo” (Benin’s capital). The looped track reveals the Kpayo Army’s early morning routines performed to the chance song of birds.
MIP is a documentation of the current state of life in Benin: the people’s reliance on petroleum and fresh drinking water, as well as the thousands who transport such vessels and cargos throughout the nation daily—legally or otherwise. MIP accordingly stands as Hazoumè’s reinterpretation of modern slavery and cheap labor in present-day Africa.
Known for his masks made of found plastic canisters and vessels, Romuald Hazoumè’s MIP is an innovative installation piece shaped into four instruments of a band ensemble. The music composition that emits from the sculptural work is based on Hazoumè’s one-day record of the Kpayo Army’s activities (a group of illegal petroleum traffickers in Benin)—thus creating a soundscape literally “Made in Porto-Novo” (Benin’s capital). The looped track reveals the Kpayo Army’s early morning routines performed to the chance song of birds.
MIP is a documentation of the current state of life in Benin: the people’s reliance on petroleum and fresh drinking water, as well as the thousands who transport such vessels and cargos throughout the nation daily—legally or otherwise. MIP accordingly stands as Hazoumè’s reinterpretation of modern slavery and cheap labor in present-day Africa.
DescriptionMade in Porto-Novo is an installation piece featuring Hazoumè’s trademark plastic canisters and vessels, which has been shaped into four instruments of a band ensemble. The band ensemble includes drums, bass, saxophone and a trumpet. Along with the jerry-can portrait placed in front of the instruments, there are also Benin sounds emanating from the instruments themselves. Within the object, next to the bass fiddle, a white sound box sits inside.
MIP is an installation piece featuring Hazoumè’s trademark plastic canisters and vessels, which has been shaped into four instruments of a band ensemble. The band ensemble includes drums, bass, saxophone and a trumpet. Along with the jerry-can portrait placed in front of the instruments, there are also Benin sounds emanating from the instruments themselves. The plastic elements are secured together with copper wires run through holes as well as screws and tape. They are attached to a wood platform with metal armatures and screws.
Within the object, next to the bass fiddle, a white sound box sits inside with white wires concealed in its support and under the platform. Wiring feeds through tubing and plugs into an electrical wall outlet behind. Copper wire is frequently used in its construction to hold materials together. A round, black, steel rod is part of its skeletal structure.
MIP is an installation piece featuring Hazoumè’s trademark plastic canisters and vessels, which has been shaped into four instruments of a band ensemble. The band ensemble includes drums, bass, saxophone and a trumpet. Along with the jerry-can portrait placed in front of the instruments, there are also Benin sounds emanating from the instruments themselves. The plastic elements are secured together with copper wires run through holes as well as screws and tape. They are attached to a wood platform with metal armatures and screws.
Within the object, next to the bass fiddle, a white sound box sits inside with white wires concealed in its support and under the platform. Wiring feeds through tubing and plugs into an electrical wall outlet behind. Copper wire is frequently used in its construction to hold materials together. A round, black, steel rod is part of its skeletal structure.
On view
In Collection(s)