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The underground can seem never ending. For, as far as one digs, there is still farther to go. This sense of the limitless has inspired a complex network of artworks that address concepts of invisibility and the divine, and as mining and other extractive practices afforded new visions of the underground, ideas of memory and loss.

Masks, figures, musical instruments, prints, photographs, and film provide insight into the ways artists have grappled with how to create a vision of unseen or unknowable forces, how to imagine the border between the living and dead, how to present the history hidden beneath our feet, and how to address the gains and losses of drilling beneath the earth's surface. Creatures that can move or tunnel between the underground and surface, such as spiders, mudfish, snakes, and dogs, have also inspired a range of artworks across the African continent that suggest just how important the underground has been to the imagination of artists for centuries.



Edo artist, Benin kingdom court style, Nigeria
Plaque
Mid-16th to 17th century
Copper alloy
Field Museum, Chicago, #8259



Christine Dixie
b. 1966, South Africa
Even in the Long Descent I-V
2007
Etching and mezzotint on paper
National Museum of African Art, purchased with funds provided by the Annie Laurie Aitken Endowment, 2011-6-3.1-5




Teke artist, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Kidumu mask
Most likely early 20th century, collected 1929
Wood, pigment
Musée du Quai Branly, Paris, France, 71.1932.89.82




George Osodi
b. 1974, Nigeria
De money series no. 1
2009
Fuji crystal archival print
National Museum of African Art, museum purchase, 2011-16-1



Yoruba artist, Nigeria
Onile (male figure)
Date unknown
Terracotta
National Museum of African Art, gift of Walt Disney Co., a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company, 2005-6-73




Hassan Echair
b. 1964, Morocco
Ascension
2006
Bamboo, charcoal, paint
Site-specific installation, National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution


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