New Orleans Museum of Art opens important exhibition highlighting West African masquerade artists
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New Orleans Museum of Art opens important exhibition highlighting West African masquerade artists
Hervé Youmbi, Cameroonian (active in Douala), Tso Scream Mask, Visages de masques (IX) series, 2015–2023. Wood, pigment, fiber, beads, textile, glue, velvet and cotton fabric, silk embroidery, horse-hair. Collection of the New Orleans Museum of Art, museum purchase, Robert P. Gordy Fund, 2023.38.1-.7.



NEW ORLEANS, LA.- The New Orleans Museum of Art opened New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations, a major exhibition presenting the work of four contemporary artists working in cities across West Africa: Chief Ekpenyong Bassey Nsa, Sheku “Goldenfinger” Fofanah, David Sanou, and Hervé Youmbi.

The first presentation of its kind, New African Masquerades offers a rare look into contemporary West African masquerade by contextualizing the works of individual artists within a range of social, economic, and religious practices and examining their networks of viewership and exchange. Made from materials including wood, cloth and fabrics, sequins, feathers, gourds, raffia, and cowry shells, the ensembles on view represent a wide variety of masquerade practices and societies.

“New Orleans has a rich tradition of masquerade, adornment, and costuming, including the many parading organizations that enliven our city’s streets during Carnival and throughout the entire year,” said Susan M. Taylor, The Montine McDaniel Freeman Director of NOMA. “This exhibition offers an important opportunity to see masquerade as a global form of artistic expression, performance, and cultural heritage.”

New African Masquerades is on view April 4–August 10, 2025, in NOMA’s first-floor Ella West Freeman Galleries. Organized in partnership with the Musée des Civilisations noires (MCN) in Dakar, Senegal, the exhibition will also be presented in a parallel form for African audiences—the first time an exhibition will be presented in such a way in North America and Africa.

The term “masquerade” has many different meanings across different cultures and communities and is loosely defined as a broad set of practices wherein individuals and societies dance in full-body, multimedia ensembles. These ensembles are then activated in many ways, including in performances, processions, and other ceremonies by either the masquerade artist or another practitioner.

Importantly, New African Masquerades presents masquerade as a complex and diverse collection of evolving contemporary practices. Some masquerades—such as those of Bassey Nsa within the Ekpe Society of Calabar, Nigeria—hold political and didactic significance; others—like Fofanah’s designs for Jollay and Ordehlay in Sierra Leone—are primarily social and celebrate holidays. Still others are created to honor a life well lived—as is the case of Sanou in Burkina Faso—or to critique—as Youmbi demonstrates. Some are private, and others are paraded through the streets. And contrary to many static museum presentations, masquerade is almost always defined by movement, theatricality, and audience participation.

Organized around four central themes, New African Masquerades provides a thorough consideration of the works of Bassey Nsa, Fofanah, Sanou, and Youmbi. Embedded within the presentation of these artists’ works are considerations of major concerns across masquerade practices more broadly: collaboration, economics, innovation, and mobility.

In its North American presentation, New African Masquerades includes thirteen full, head-to-toe masquerade ensembles created by artists and groups who are celebrated for their work locally in their communities, across the continent of Africa, and internationally. Full artist bios are included below.

In addition to being a featured artist, Youmbi—whose work directly addresses the ethical questions inherent in presenting masquerades internationally—serves as a core member of the exhibition planning and curatorial team.

“My work over the last ten years has taken the form of hybrid masks that challenge the clichés and categories to which masks from Africa have generally been confined,” Youmbi said. “Addressing the question of new masks in Africa today is not just about the aesthetics and ethics of collaborations that govern the creation of new objects and living entities from Africa. It’s also, and above all, a question of envisaging new ways of collecting and exhibiting them.”

In addition to ensembles, the exhibition includes other elements such as photography, recorded interviews, and an immersive video experience showing never-before-seen 360-degree footage, including views of the ensembles being performed, looks into the artists’ studios, and clips sharing the perspectives of the artists.

Created with the support and participation of the artists, masquerade societies, and their communities, the immersive experience and supplementary videos offer visitors the extremely rare opportunity to see masquerades that would normally not be accessible to the public. These additional exhibition components underscore the importance of music, movement, libations, skillful presentation, and audience participation to masquerade more broadly.

Beyond highlighting the works of four specific artists, the exhibition and accompanying catalogue present a case study in the methodology of producing a collaborative, cross-continental exhibition. Considering topics such as the ethics of presenting masquerade works in a museum context, traveling ensembles within and beyond the African continent, provenance, and cultural ownership, with contributions from African and North American scholars and artists, New African Masquerades suggests an ethically-grounded transparent model for contemporary exhibition-making related to African art.

“In developing this exhibition, it has been crucial to reframe masquerade as a vibrant contemporary practice that both honors past genres and relates to a global present,” said Amanda M. Maples, Françoise Billion Richardson Curator of African Art at NOMA. “Museum visitors will leave with a better view of masquerade as a rich collection of artistic practices today. New African Masquerades acts as a corrective for the frequent exclusion of masquerade in presentations of African and contemporary art.”










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