Uganda's visual environment: development and change

dc.contributor.author Kyeyune, George
dc.date.accessioned 2012-07-31T09:17:45Z
dc.date.available 2012-07-31T09:17:45Z
dc.date.issued 2002
dc.description.abstract The appropriation of external elements and their local domestication are important ingredients for the growth and survival of a distinct culture. Norbert Kaggwa, a student at the Margaret Trowell School of Fine Art, Makerere University, Kampala, 1960-1964, gives voice to a gratitude for social changes that led to rapid economic development, and at the same time to a dissatisfaction over repercussions of a rapidity so unprecedented that particular localities were taken by storm, allowing them no more than a moment for the adjustments necessary to their survival. This essay looks at the ways in which external factors were necessary currency for the emergence of new local modernism in the visual arts, and at the means by which local resources were used in this development in the wider context of rapid social and cultural change in Uganda en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10570/640
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Triangle Arts Trust en_US
dc.subject Developing countries en_US
dc.subject Uganda en_US
dc.subject Sculpture en_US
dc.subject Urban society en_US
dc.subject Art en_US
dc.subject Pottery en_US
dc.title Uganda's visual environment: development and change en_US
dc.type Book chapter en_US
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