Azouaou Mammeri Explained

Azouaou Mammeri (1890 or 1892—1954), also known as Si Azouaou Mammeri, was an Algerian painter born in 1890[1] or 1892 in the village of Taourirt-Mimoun which was part of Aït Yenni. He died on September 17, 1954, in Aït Yenni.

Family and early life

Mammeri was born to the Aït Yenni tribe, the son of Saïd ben Mohammed.[2] His family was that of hereditary Caïds, and the region in which he was born near the Kabylia Mountains was considered favorable for the colonial administration's goals of educating the indigenous in French language and culture.[3] From 1906 to 1909, he attended l'École Normale d'Alger in Bouzareah, a training college for schoolteachers. He also visited various cities of France accompanied by student teachers.

Teaching and early art career (1909–1921)

Mammeri was appointed to a teaching position in October 1909 in Toudja, which is near Béjaïa. He met Édouard Herzig, who helped advise him when Mammeri started as a painter. In 1913, Mammeri was appointed to Gouraya, which is between Cherchell and Ténès, and met Léon Carré, who shared his knowledge of painting with him over a period of eight months.

In 1916, he went to Fez, Morocco, where his cousin, Mohammad Mammeri, was a tutor to the future Mohammed V of Morocco. Mammeri found success in Fez and Rabat as a teacher. Starting in 1917, he contributed to articles in the French government's magazine France-Maroc such as one discussing life in a bilingual primary school in Morocco.[4] His article in the December 1918 issue of France-Maroc contained among other things, one of his important early works, Koranic School.[5] The drawing is similar to his oil painting titled Interior of a Koranic School which is at the Cleveland Museum of Art.[6] The Koranic School painting, along with a few others, were featured in an exhibition in Paris in 1921. In Mammeri's first exhibition in Paris, which was in 1917, he exhibited two landscape paintings of Fez, and in 1921, Léonce Bénédite acquired those for the Musée du Luxembourg.

In 1921, Mammeri started exhibiting his art in Algiers.

Caïd to the Douar of the Beni-Yanni (1922–1927)

With Mammeri's return to Algeria, he became a caïd in 1922, acting as an administrator in the area where he grew up. This was during a period where French interest in his art was high, also attested to by three of Mammeri's woodprints being part of a print exhibition that happened at the Brooklyn Museum in 1923.[7] The woodcuts were said to be from the Society for the Diffusion of French Knowledge in America by a New York Times article, which reflects how critics of the time perceived Mammeri as an "Occidental artist".[8] Mammeri listened to the various problems of locals, who were also excited by Mammeri's art.

Return to Morocco (1927–1948)

In 1927, Mammeri returned to Morocco where he was an art teacher in Fez. In 1928, he became a regional inspector of indigenous arts in Rabat and in 1929, he was appointed as inspector of Moroccan arts in Marrakech, a position he held until 1948 when he retired. After his retirement, Mammeri founded a museum for indigenous arts in Dar Si Said, a school, and orchestras of Andalusian and Berber music with a weekly radio program on Radio Rabat.

He was made a knight in the Legion of Honour in 1950.

Legacy

Mammeri is considered by some to be the most Moroccan of the Algerian artists, and to be the most Algerian of the Moroccan artists. Mammeri is also considered the first and oldest authentic Algerian painter. Mammeri was posthumously awarded le Grand Prix artistique de l'Algérie 1955. Mammeri was included in Jean Sénac's 1963 exhibition of Algerian painters.[9]

Members of Mammeri's extended family include anthropologist Mouloud Mammeri (1917–1989). Mammeri's grandson Azwaw Mammeri (1954–2021), who signed his name as "Azwaw", was also a painter.[10]

Main exhibitions

Museums

Bibliography and sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mammeri, Azouaou (1890-1954) . IdRef - Identifiants et Référentiels pour l'ESR . 31 May 2023.
  2. https://www.leonore.archives-nationales.culture.gouv.fr/ui/notice/244733 File of the Legion of Honour of Azouaou Mammeri
  3. Benjamin . Roger . Colonial Tutelage to Nationalist Affirmation: Mammeri and Racim, Painters of the Maghreb . Orientalism's Interlocutors . 2002 . Duke University Press . 43–78 . 10.1515/9780822383857-005. 9780822383857 .
  4. Mammeri . L'Enseignement Une Classe Marocaine . France-Maroc . March 15, 1917 . 2 . 3 . 34–35 . 24 May 2023.
  5. Mammeri . Une Classe Coranique . France-Maroc . December 15, 1918 . 12 . 351–354 . 24 May 2023.
  6. Web site: Mammeri . Azouaou . Interior of a School Coranique . The Cleveland Museum of Art . 31 October 2018 . 25 May 2023.
  7. News: The World of Art: Paintings and Prints in Summer Exhibitions . The New York Times . July 22, 1923.
  8. Gustave Kahn, Art, in Mercure de France 160 (December 1922): 762–63
  9. Web site: Artists of the Algerian Fraternity 1963-2020 . Dalloul Art Foundation . 26 May 2023.
  10. https://www.jeuneafrique.com/71594/archives-thematique/tableaux-de-deuil/ "Mourning paintings: In his house in Bordj el-Kiffan, the Algerian painter Azwaw Mammeri lives among his paintings"
  11. Text from Le sicile de XXe dans l’art algérien, texts by Ramon Tio Bellido, Malika Dorbani Bouabdellah, Dalila Mahammad Orfali and Fatma Zohra Zamoum, Château Borély, Marseille / Orangerie du Sénat, Paris, April-August 2003, Paris, Aica press, 2003, pp. 153-155
  12. Texts from Le sicile de XXe dans l’art algérien, texts by Ramon Tio Bellido, Malika Dorbani Bouabdellah, Dalila Mahammad Orfali and Fatma Zohra Zamoum, Château Borély, Marseille / Orangerie du Sénat, Paris, April-August 2003, Paris, Aica press, 2003, pp. 155-156