www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The artist is drawn to the river Scheldt, acknowledging it as the gateway between here and there , the city and the world, but also, more poignantly, between Belgium and Baloji s native Congo.
www.kasalaction.org:
The bronze sculpture takes its shape from the lukasa (meaning the long hand ), a cultural device used in the Luba culture of Southern Congo. Lukasa are memory boards and a vital part of the oral tradition of historiography and storytelling of the Luba people. Traditionally, they are made out of wood and ornately embellished with abstract carvings and inlayed with stones, shells or pieces of metal. The lukasa is used in ceremonies where Luba political history and mythology is orally transmitted by a so-called man of memory who would hold the lukasa in one hand, and trace the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The Long Hand is a major addition to our city s public art collection. Sammy Baloji contemplates the relation between Antwerp and the world, a relation that has certainly been troubled at times. Art in public space has the power to address both the past and present, and to add new stories to our communal narrative. Nabilla Ait Daoud, Alderman for Culture.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The Long Hand holds many references that congeal into an artwork made of bronze, bricks and recycled plastic three composite materials. Bronze, an alloy of tin and copper, the latter being one of the main mining and export products of the DRC. Bricks, crafted in Maaseik, Limburg, out of clay and soil from spoil tips, remnants of Belgium s lost mining industry. Plastic waste collected from factories and then melted and cast into cut diamond shapes that adorn the bronze figure.
www.kasalaction.org:
One important reference in the conception of the artwork is Paul Panda Farnana (1888-1930), who as a young child was brought to Belgium from Congo, became the first Congolese to graduate from a Belgian higher education institute, and went on to be a leading voice in the pan-African movement and the fight against European colonial rule.
Another reference of import is a quote by former mayor of Antwerp, Lode Craeybeckx, who said: A citizen of Antwerp need only put their hand in de river to be connected to the world.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The form and title of the sculpture are derived from the Lukasa, a cultural device used in the Luba culture of Southern Congo. Lukasa (or long hand in Kiluba) are memory boards and a vital part of the oral tradition of historiography and storytelling of the Luba people. With The Long Hand, Sammy Baloji introduces this mnemonic device into public space, making it monumental, and as such aligning with the tradition of public art as commemorative signifiers.
Traditionally, Lukasa are made out of wood and ornately embellished with abstract carvings and inlayed with stones or shells. They are used in ceremonies where Luba history and mythology is orally transmitted by a so-called man of memory who holds the Lukasa in one hand, and traces the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information.
The coloured plastic diamonds are attached to the surface of the bronze sculpture in such a way that they outline the naval route between Antwerp and Muanda, the main port city of Congo. The brick platform that houses the statue is conceived of by the artist as a place to sit, convene, and exchange stories.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
Come and see on this solemn day
?On this third day of the month June 2022
?How thoughts of elsewhere
?Are embodied in local materials
?How the luk s of the Balub of the DRC
?Made of beads and pieces of metal
?Becomes a proud monument in a new environment
?Carrier of global values
?Come and admire in the Belgian public space
?This remarkable unifying figure
?A work about encounters about memories
?Carriers of ideas on emancipation and brotherhood
?Important to the Congolese diaspora of Antwerp
?As well as to all inhabitants of Antwerp
? Fragment taken from The Long Hand by Jean Kabuta, written upon the invitation of Sammy Baloji and performed during the inauguration of Baloji s public sculpture The Long Hand on 3 June 2022 in Antwerp.
www.kasalaction.org:
Who would hold the lukasa in one hand, and trace the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information. and form a line that mimics the sea route leading from Antwerp to Muanda, Congo s main port city. The platform the sculpture stands on is intended as a space for social gathering and exchange.
Sammy Baloji s work introduces the act of remembering and (hi)story telling into our shared public space. But is not all (monumental) public art at the service of memory and commemoration? In line with the ambiguous nature of traditional lukasa, Baloji s contemporary reinterpretation holds no fixed narrative. It is an invitation to convene and converse, to recall, to remember, and to remember differently.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
Visual artist Sammy Baloji (b. 1978, DCR, lives and works in Brussels) was commissioned a new permanent public work by the Antwerp Public Art Collection. This commission marks the first permanent work in public space by Baloji and the first work of an artist of Congolese descent in Antwerp s public art collection.
Titled The Long Hand, his monumental sculpture now graces the Southern quay of the river Scheldt. The artist was immediately drawn to the river, acknowledging it as the gateway between here and there , the city and the world, but also, more poignantly, between Belgium and Baloji s native Congo.
The artist is drawn to the river Scheldt, acknowledging it as the gateway between here and there , the city and the world, but also, more poignantly, between Belgium and Baloji s native Congo.
www.kasalaction.org:
The bronze sculpture takes its shape from the lukasa (meaning the long hand ), a cultural device used in the Luba culture of Southern Congo. Lukasa are memory boards and a vital part of the oral tradition of historiography and storytelling of the Luba people. Traditionally, they are made out of wood and ornately embellished with abstract carvings and inlayed with stones, shells or pieces of metal. The lukasa is used in ceremonies where Luba political history and mythology is orally transmitted by a so-called man of memory who would hold the lukasa in one hand, and trace the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The Long Hand is a major addition to our city s public art collection. Sammy Baloji contemplates the relation between Antwerp and the world, a relation that has certainly been troubled at times. Art in public space has the power to address both the past and present, and to add new stories to our communal narrative. Nabilla Ait Daoud, Alderman for Culture.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The Long Hand holds many references that congeal into an artwork made of bronze, bricks and recycled plastic three composite materials. Bronze, an alloy of tin and copper, the latter being one of the main mining and export products of the DRC. Bricks, crafted in Maaseik, Limburg, out of clay and soil from spoil tips, remnants of Belgium s lost mining industry. Plastic waste collected from factories and then melted and cast into cut diamond shapes that adorn the bronze figure.
www.kasalaction.org:
One important reference in the conception of the artwork is Paul Panda Farnana (1888-1930), who as a young child was brought to Belgium from Congo, became the first Congolese to graduate from a Belgian higher education institute, and went on to be a leading voice in the pan-African movement and the fight against European colonial rule.
Another reference of import is a quote by former mayor of Antwerp, Lode Craeybeckx, who said: A citizen of Antwerp need only put their hand in de river to be connected to the world.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
The form and title of the sculpture are derived from the Lukasa, a cultural device used in the Luba culture of Southern Congo. Lukasa (or long hand in Kiluba) are memory boards and a vital part of the oral tradition of historiography and storytelling of the Luba people. With The Long Hand, Sammy Baloji introduces this mnemonic device into public space, making it monumental, and as such aligning with the tradition of public art as commemorative signifiers.
Traditionally, Lukasa are made out of wood and ornately embellished with abstract carvings and inlayed with stones or shells. They are used in ceremonies where Luba history and mythology is orally transmitted by a so-called man of memory who holds the Lukasa in one hand, and traces the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information.
The coloured plastic diamonds are attached to the surface of the bronze sculpture in such a way that they outline the naval route between Antwerp and Muanda, the main port city of Congo. The brick platform that houses the statue is conceived of by the artist as a place to sit, convene, and exchange stories.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
Come and see on this solemn day
?On this third day of the month June 2022
?How thoughts of elsewhere
?Are embodied in local materials
?How the luk s of the Balub of the DRC
?Made of beads and pieces of metal
?Becomes a proud monument in a new environment
?Carrier of global values
?Come and admire in the Belgian public space
?This remarkable unifying figure
?A work about encounters about memories
?Carriers of ideas on emancipation and brotherhood
?Important to the Congolese diaspora of Antwerp
?As well as to all inhabitants of Antwerp
? Fragment taken from The Long Hand by Jean Kabuta, written upon the invitation of Sammy Baloji and performed during the inauguration of Baloji s public sculpture The Long Hand on 3 June 2022 in Antwerp.
www.kasalaction.org:
Who would hold the lukasa in one hand, and trace the lines and encrusted jewels with the other, using them as nodes of information. and form a line that mimics the sea route leading from Antwerp to Muanda, Congo s main port city. The platform the sculpture stands on is intended as a space for social gathering and exchange.
Sammy Baloji s work introduces the act of remembering and (hi)story telling into our shared public space. But is not all (monumental) public art at the service of memory and commemoration? In line with the ambiguous nature of traditional lukasa, Baloji s contemporary reinterpretation holds no fixed narrative. It is an invitation to convene and converse, to recall, to remember, and to remember differently.
www.middelheimmuseum.be:
Visual artist Sammy Baloji (b. 1978, DCR, lives and works in Brussels) was commissioned a new permanent public work by the Antwerp Public Art Collection. This commission marks the first permanent work in public space by Baloji and the first work of an artist of Congolese descent in Antwerp s public art collection.
Titled The Long Hand, his monumental sculpture now graces the Southern quay of the river Scheldt. The artist was immediately drawn to the river, acknowledging it as the gateway between here and there , the city and the world, but also, more poignantly, between Belgium and Baloji s native Congo.