Thursday, 4 March 2021

LEGO Is In The News Again,

this time featuring a massive 100,000 pieces,


image via The Art Newspaper, the Toronto museum has acquired a sculpture made from 100,000 pieces of Lego, as it happens we have posted more than a few posts about LEGO, back to the huge sculpture that was created by Ghanian-Canadian artist Ekow Nimako, who envisioned an ancient trading town in Mauritania one thousand years in the future:

Kumbi Saleh was the centre of the trans-Saharan trade route at the height of the Ghana Empire, boosting cultural diffusion between Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Europe, the work was the centrepiece of Nimako’s 2019 solo exhibition Building Black: Civilisations at the museum. It was commissioned as a response to the museum’s concurrent archaeological show Caravans of Gold, Fragments in Time, which explored ancient trades routes in the Sahara and their cross-cultural impact, including their role in the spread of Islam, the acquisition “enhances the museum’s ability to tell global stories about the contributions of Muslim civilisations across time”, says the museum's curator, Michael Chagnon. And it boosts the institution’s other efforts to spotlight Islamic studies, like a newly launched podcast series exploring Muslim arts and culture, “His being a Toronto-based artist was also critical to our decision,” Chagnon says. “The museum is a cultural hub for our neighbourhood and part of our work—and part of any museum’s work—must be to support local artists.” the power of LEGO.



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