thumb|Gert Chesi in the Voodoo forest.Gert Chesi (born 22 August 1940) is an Austrian photographer, author, journalist and filmmaker. At the end of the 1970s he became internationally famous after publishing the book Last Africans, which was translated into six languages. In 1995 Gert Chesi founded the Haus der Völker in Schwaz, which is a museum for tribal art and ethnography.[1] [2]
Today Gert Chesi lives in Togo, Thailand and Austria.
Born in Schwaz, Tyrol, at an early age, Gert Chesi traveled to distant countries.
In 1959 he worked as a freelance journalist and photographer for local newspapers to report on his experiences. In his Tyrolean home he was soon considered a lateral thinker, who refused to nationalist tendencies. His world view did not always correspond to the valid thought patterns.[3]
In the 1970s Chesi and Bert Breit point out the untenable conditions in the Tyrolean country girls' educational center St. Martin in Schwaz. These pictures of his photo documentary are an early testimony of the civil-society protest against state welfare education and forced education in Tyrol.[4] In those days, penal isolation was part of education of state welfare education.[5] [6] [7]
In 1958 Chesi founded the first jazz club in western Austria, the Studio 12 in Schwaz. The Studio 12 played jazz provoked the Schwazer population, who did not know what to do with the "Negro music".For Chesi, jazz meant a commitment to freedom and liberation. He did not fit into the conservative, prudish and restrictive world of the petty bourgeoisie of the post-war era.[8]
In 1963 Gert Chesi became a freelancer for Österreichischer Rundfunk and organized the "Schwazer September," a music and art festival in Schwaz.[9]
1964 saw the opening of the gallery "Eremitage Schwaz". Artists such as Ernst Fuchs (artist), Hilde Goldschmidt and Hans Staudacher exhibited at the Eremitage. In the following years, Chesi transformed this cultural institution from a gallery to a jazz club. The motivation of his work was the desire to make the cultures of the world known locally.
From these beginnings of jazz music in Tyrol developed an international forum in which American, Japanese Brazilian and European jazz greats of this time have occurred. Together with Jup Rathgeber he was one of the pioneers of the avant-garde Schwaz art and culture scene.[10] [11]
For example, Chick Corea, Gilberto Gil, Lester Bowie, Gerry Hemingway, Meredith Monk, Dave Holland, Art Ensemble of Chicago, George Russel, Don Moye, Dino Saluzzi and Kelvyn Bell performed in Schwaz.[12] [13]
The Eremitage is an integral part of the Tyrolean cultural scene and is run as a cultural café and cultural restaurant. Regular international jazz concerts and cabaret projects take place.
In 1961 he made a major five-month motorcycle trip, which led him across Jordan to Sudan. This journey marks the beginning of his journalistic work dealing with the peoples and cultures of the world.
In 1964, Gert Chesi visited Albert Schweitzer in Lambarene, Gabon and stayed for eight months as an employee in the Lepradorf. This was followed by publications on Lambarene and the work of Albert Schweitzer. When Schweitzer died in 1965, Chesis' photos were the latest available recordings by Albert Schweitzer, and accordingly they were sought after by the media. The Quick (magazine) bought these shots and Chesis's basis for the photojournalist was laid.[14]
This time in Africa also marks the beginning of his collecting activity and his occupation with African art. The Museum der Weltkulturen, Frankfurt acquired 18,000 photos from this period.[15] From 1965 Gert Chesi wrote numerous publications on art and ethnographic topics in national media and the ORF. Between 1967 and 1977 he was present in continuous series. In 1969 he organized exhibitions of African art, organized his lecture tours in Germany, Austria and Switzerland and exhibited his photographs in national galleries and museums the following year.[16]
His ethnomusical sound recordings culminated in the release of the double album "Black Magic".[17] [18] [19]
In 1975, his first illustrated book The Last Africans was published in six languages. As a result, several lectures and exhibitions took place. Among them was an exhibition of African art from the Chesi collection in the Musee des beaux Arts Grenoble and the Galerie Numaga Switzerland. In the same year he published texts and picture contributions in GEO, Stern, Ambiente and scientific journals.[20]
In 1978 Gert Chesi devoted himself to African-American syncretism in West Africa, Haiti and Brazil (Voodoo).
The illustrated book Voodoo: Africa's Secret Power was published in four languages. 1979 followed several study and work trips to the Philippines and Africa. For this purpose, the band Faith Healers in the Philippines was published in 1980. At the same time he worked on the "Encyclopaedia Togolais" on behalf of the President. Further work trips to Africa in 1982 were followed by the book publication Medicine of the Black Gods (German: Die Medizin der schwarzen Götter) As well as book participations in Africa - Enthralled by a Continent (German: Afrika - Im Banne eines Kontinents) and Colon - the black picture of the white man (German: Colon - Das schwarze Bilde des weißen Mannes). 1983 followed Susanne Wenger - A Life with the Gods in Their Yoruba Homeland (German: Susanne Wenger - Ein Leben mit den Göttern).
In 1984, an exhibition curated by Fred Jahn was opened in the Munich Stadtmuseum, whose objects came from the Gert Chesi collection. In the same year the catalog Kunst der Zauberer appeared.
Chesi is guided by the vision to build bridges between cultures.[21]
In 1984 he became a lecturer at the University of Innsbruck and taught photography at the Institute of Interior Design for ten years.
In 1986 and in the following years various photo exhibitions took place in several international galleries and museums. A catalog was published for his exhibition at Museum der Begegnung, Schmieding.
Another year later, he exhibited at the burgenländischen Landesausstellung . A color catalog for the exhibition "Theater der Übertreibungen" was published.At the same time, Chesi published in various journals and went on further study trips to India, Ladakh, Africa and Brazil.
In 1988, the Museum der Weltkulturen, Frankfurt acquired Chesi's Ethno Photo Archive consisting of 20,000 images dating back to 1973.
1991 Expansion of the Africa collection. In 1992, Gert Chesi collaborated with the Völkerkundemuseum Rotterdam, in 1993 several exhibitions of ethnological objects took place in numerous museums and galleries.
2013 Exhibition and catalog showing children in context with spiritual rites[25] [26]
The motivation of his work as a collector and discoverer was the desire to make the cultures of the world known, to treat their achievements with respect, to promote the free spirit and to reach as many people as possible.
In 1994, preparatory work on the Haus der Völker began in Schwaz, which opened in 1995. Chesi chose as location the premises of the meanwhile abandoned Tyrolean country girls' education center St. Martin in Schwaz, whose abuses he once discovered and documented.[27] In an environment where the will of young girls was once broken, in 1995 Chesi opened the Haus der Völker, which stood for tolerance and international understanding.
At the same time, the book Architecture and Myth (German: Architektur und Mythos). For the universe series the ORF produced an Africa movie with Chesi. In 1995 his son was born.
Chesi deliberately chose an opulent selection of works in his exhibition concept in order to convey a holistic understanding of culture. He wants to illustrate the immeasurable wealth that humanity has produced.[28] The exhibits cover a period of 4,000 years and include African masks and statues, such as Asian bronzes and terracottas.[29] Through the eccentric, sometimes incredibly familiar beauty of the exhibited pieces, the collection is intended to open the eyes of the observer to the achievements of the peoples of this world. Consciously, the scientific part is reduced.
As the founder, director and owner of the Haus der Völker museum, Chesi presented his collection as a permanent exhibition in the following years and supplemented it with numerous special exhibitions in collaboration with international museums and collectors. Outside of his own business, Chesi also curated eight other exhibitions, including the Ethnological Museum Hamburg.[30] In 1996, Gert Chesi founded the Kulturverein - Museum der Völker, which was under his leadership until 2016.
Under the direction of Gert Chesi, the Museum der Völker developed into an internationally renowned Ethnographic Museum, which initially housed the collection of a single collector as a permanent exhibition. Later this was supplemented by loans from the Schell Collection and the Lindner collection.[31] The museum displayed objects from Africa and Asia that photographer and journalist Gert Chesi has collected for over 50 years. More than 50 special exhibitions illuminated the cultures from America to Japan.
In 1999, the museum received the Tyrolean Museum Prize and the Recognition Award as part of the Austrian Museum Prize.[32]
In 2013, the museum received an extension building financed by the state of Tyrol.[33]
In 2014, the Museum got the Austrian Museum Quality Seal by ICOM Austria.[34]
In 2016, after 23 years, Gert Chesi retired as museum director. He donated his valuable collection to the city of Schwaz under the condition of some framework conditions, with the aim of continuing the Museum der völker and the preservation of his collection in his spirit. The collection, which the 77-year-old ethnology specialist has collected all his life, consists of about 1400 objects and a library. The value is estimated at two million euros. He continued to work as a consultant and curator for the museum focusing on producing documentary films.[35] [36]
In 2017, a new management took over the chairmanship of the Kulturvereins Museum der Völker.
In 2018, since basic donation-related conditions were not met and Gert Chesi was excluded by the new leadership, he withdrew completely from the museum.[37] [38] [39] [40]
In 2005 with Gerhard Merzeder, Chesi founded the first German-language magazine for non-European art, the A4 Magazin, which appears twice a year for ten years. The publishing house Haus der Völker, which belongs to the museum, is the publisher of the first German-language magazine dealing with non-European art and culture. The title of the magazine A4 refers to the four continents, Australia, Asia, Africa and America. Editors-in-chief are Gerhard Merzeder and Gert Chesi.
On the occasion of Gert Chesi's 80th birthday, three events are taking place in his home town of Schwaz.[41] [42] [43] [44]
On September 4, 2020, Gert Chesi presented his film Africa, Old Cults, New Perspectives to the public in VZ Jenbach.[45]
In the course of his life Gert Chesi worked with international well known artists. He used the opportunity to portray some of them. These pictures went around the world.
Gert Chesi prepared another book called Trance and Possession Cults in West-Africa (German: Trance und Besessenheitskulte in Westafrika).
In 1998 his first CD of the series "The Sound of Africa" (The Sound of Voodoo) was produced. The "Haus der Völker" took part in the exhibition "Cults, Artists, Kings" (German: "Kulte, Künstler, Könige") in the Castle Museum Linz and in the exhibition "Power of Women and Domination of Men" (German: "Frauenmacht und Männerherrschaft") in the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum in Cologne. On behalf of the German-Chinese Society he traveled to China and Asia on several occasions to select exhibits for the exhibition "2000 Years of Silk Road" in collaboration with Mrs. Prof. Dr. M.Yaldiz, Director of the Museum of Asian Art Berlin - Dahlem. In 1999 he worked on the preliminary studies of the book Voodoo in Africa. Chesi traveled to West Africa to prepare the exhibition "2000 Years of African Ceramic" (German: "2000 Jahre afrikanische Keramik"). On behalf of the city Schwaz, he organized two exhibitions with the title "The Spirit of Silver" on the occasion of the 100 year festival of becoming a city.
After a severe heart surgery in 2000, Chesi traveled to Africa and Asia on several occasions. After an extensive trip to China the preparations of the exhibition "Textile Art of Chinese Mountain Peoples" (German: "Textile Kunst chinesischer Bergvölker") were completed. The concept of "Buddha in Art and Myth" (German: "Buddha in Kunst und Mythos") was realized; the exhibition was opened in March. During the same year, Gert Chesi discovered a significant sculpture of the Nok and acquired it for the "House of the People". In collaboration with the Museum of Ethnology, Hamburg he opened a huge exhibition about Japan.
In 2002 his autobiographical book Africa in ones Heart (German: Afrika im Herzen) was published by Haymon. One year later his book Voodoo in Africa was published by Haymon, as well. In 2005 Gert Chesi moved his main-residence to Togo and assigned the operative part of "Haus der Völker" to a new newly founded cultural association. Within the same year, he published his first German Magazine of Non-European art in collaboration with Gerhard Merzeder: MAGAZIN A4 which is issued twice annually. In 2006 Merzeder and Chesi designed their first extensive photo book about the culture of the Nok. He produced two movies about Africa. During the years 2007 to 2010 he hosted several exhibitions in the "Haus der Völker" and published various catalogue essays. He further engaged in African traditions.
In 2010 the book Africa- Magicians of the Earth (German: Afrika – Die Magier der Erde) was published by Studienverlag. After extensive trips to Thailand, India and Africa, he published Views of humankind in other worlds (German: Menschenbilder aus anderen Welten). An exhibition series of these images started in January 2012 in Rabalderhaus in Schwaz. In February 2012 the photographs of Gert Chesis were displayed in the Institute Francaise in Togo.
2013 Gert Chesi started to produce documentary films about tribal and religious traditions in Africa and Asia.