African Artworks | Eastern NC Now

Traditional, modern African art on display at ECU

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of ECU News Services. The author of this post is Crystal Baity.

    About 150 African art pieces incorporating everyday items like hand stamped fabric to one-of-a-kind carved Gongoli masks are on display in a new exhibition in Jenkins Fine Arts Center at East Carolina University.

    The artwork has been donated by Celeste and Reginald Hodges of Durham to ECU's School of Art and Design, adding to the school's large African art collection. The exhibit, "Selections from the Celeste and Reginald Hodges Collection: African art, from traditional to modern," will be in the Wellington B. Gray Gallery through Sept. 30.

    The Hodges are former Peace Corps volunteers who - after their assignments ended - built a life and family in West Africa, working for international organizations for two decades. During that time, they collected hundreds of traditional and modern artworks and textiles and took photographs and portraits of village life, before eventually settling in North Carolina.

    They have donated hundreds of items to universities and museums in addition to ECU, including Duke, UNC Chapel Hill, NC State, the University of Michigan and the North Carolina Museum of Art.

    While several have shown a few pieces at a time, ECU has created an exhibition to display the entire collection at one time. "This is the first time there's ever been an actual exhibit of our pieces," Celeste said. "We're just really honored that ECU has our collection and is doing an exhibit."

    For the art to be exhibited at ECU also has special meaning for Reginald, who grew up on a tobacco and cotton farm in Cumberland County. "This is the first time we've had an exhibit in an area that incorporates eastern North Carolina," he said. Celeste grew up in Chicago, where her father ran a mom-and-pop grocery store before he got a job with Coca-Cola and moved the family to the suburbs.

    The Hodges visited ECU's gallery on Friday while the artwork was being installed. Curator Maria Modlin and Kate Bukoski, director of the School of Art and Design, have worked with the couple for more than a year on the donation and transfer of items in preparation for the exhibition. An opening reception is scheduled 5-8 p.m. on Sept. 1.

    "We allowed them to select anything they wanted, and we noticed when they went around, they selected baskets, book markers, a broom - they took authentic art. It was really a mixture that reflected the culture," Reginald said, adding that some dolls on display were originally made for tourists.

    "It is nice the way that you have incorporated the household everyday pieces, which a lot of museums do not want to show, but it shows the culture of the people who made the art," he said.

    Some of the Hodges' favorite pieces include life-sized 1950s Gongoli masks that were used to make people laugh during sad times, and a wedding blanket that helped protect people against mosquitoes.

    "I look at what is in the gallery right now from the collection and there's something for every single student in our school," Bukoski said. "There are textiles, there's print making, there's silk screen on cloth, there's wood carving, there's sculpture, there's the embroidery, the graphic design with the currency. There's really something for everyone here."

    The history of the items spans a massive geographic area from Tangier on Morocco's west coast to Durban along Africa's southeast coast. Many were shipped to the U.S. before war started. "We had no idea that a war was going to engulf Liberia and Sierra Leone," said Reginald, who worked for five years to demobilize child soldiers in those countries before heading to Angola. "The war in Angola went on 25 years. There were people there we saw and met who never knew a time when there wasn't a war."

    Celeste and Reginald decided to apply to the Peace Corps after hearing John F. Kennedy's speech announcing its creation. They were accepted to the Corps after college and met in the late 1960s while on assignment in rural Sierra Leone, where they were later married. The Hodges relocated to North Carolina in 2000. Reginald worked as director of the Durham Literacy Council and Celeste was a web administrator at Duke University until retirement in 2014 and 2018.

    Celeste said it was time to part with the artwork; they recently donated over 550 photographs to Duke. "We can't hold onto these any longer. We're in our late 70s and we have to let it go. It's a dilemma facing so many Peace Corps volunteers that we know. They have items that they treasure, and they want them to go to a good place. We're just delighted that ECU is taking them."

    The Hodges said they hope the exhibit will help promote a better understanding and appreciation of Africa, which accomplishes one of the Peace Corps three goals to help Americans learn about other people and cultures. "We're still doing what the Peace Corps (envisioned), and we were volunteers over 50 years ago," Reginald said. Photos of the items that were donated to ECU along with information about the Hodges can be found on their website.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Disappearing Island East Carolina University, School News, The Region, Neighboring Counties Future Focus


HbAD0

Latest Neighboring Counties

A North Carolina State Senate race is heading for a recount after the two pro-Trump Republicans come down to a two vote margin.
This is simply a failure of will, and we are here to help impose that will today, so that to me is the simple punchline," said State Treasurer Brad Briner. "I appreciate the leaders of Rocky Mount being here, but we need to get to a place where there is the will to fix a very, very serious problem.”
A federal judge will not issue an injunction blocking local Watauga County election districts created by the Republican-led North Carolina General Assembly.
The FBI has captured Alejandro “Alex” Rosales Castillo, who is on the 10 Most Wanted Fugitive list and wanted in connection with a 2016 murder in Charlotte.
A major redevelopment project planned in Morehead City has been scrapped following strong public opposition over the use of eminent domain.
In the coming months, the North Carolina Supreme Court will decide whether a class-action lawsuit can move forward against Raleigh over water and sewer impact fees.

HbAD1

Former congressman Wiley Nickel made his candidacy for the office of Wake County district attorney official this week, with his Tuesday announcement.
Groups representing North Carolina's travel and tourism industry support a lawsuit against Currituck County at the North Carolina Supreme Court.
Plaintiffs in a $16 million class-action lawsuit against Raleigh challenged the city's legal tactics in a new state Supreme Court filing.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools is asking the North Carolina Supreme Court to overturn a lower court order that would force the school system to pay into a retirement fund for campus police.
Members of the North Carolina Rural Health Association (NCRHA) visited Washington, D.C., on Feb. 14, 2024, to meet with elected officials and advocate for policies to improve access to care in rural areas.

HbAD2

The US Supreme Court will not take the case of Virginia-based owners of a Dare County beach home who challenged the county's COVID-related shutdown in 2020.

HbAD3

 
 
Back to Top