Tag: Abi Meekel

  • To Zine or not to Zine? – The cultural significance of self-publishing

    The word ‘zine’ is derived from the term fanzine, referring to a publication form that first started circulating in the 1930s. During the 1970s fanzines translated into a more developed type of publishing with the then popular punk fanzines and later the upsurge of queer and feminist driven zines in the late 1980s. This was the result of the fanzine form moving away from fan culture and clearing a space for zinesters who felt misrepresented by mainstream media to have their opinions expressed in print. Zines have been described as “non-commercial, nonprofessional, small-circulation magazines which their creators produce, publish, and distribute by themselves”. With developments in technology, zines have shown growth by incorporating more diverse content such as personal reflections, special interest, literary zines, and fanzines. The unifying elements of zines are their independent production, writing, and design, existing outside of the fringes of mainstream publishing. Zines explore topics that are frequently ignored and overlooked by mainstream media and play a pivotal role in representing the possibilities for counter-hegemonic transformation. Being independent of commercial contemplations and viability, zines address a smaller audience of like-minded individuals and can act as a safe outlet for self-expression (Bold 2017).

    We are living in a time where there has been a large-scale resurgence of older forms of content creation and storing. This can be seen when looking at the popularity of film photography in recent times and the ‘coolness’ that is associated with vinyl, tape and the early ’00s aesthetic. We are currently living in the golden age of paper and there is an increasing interest by creative sugar babies to voice themselves through self-publishing. To find out more about this phenomenon I spoke to the creators of two new South-African zines, ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ and ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’.

    Image from ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ zine

    ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ is a zine created by Capetonian creatives Keenan Oliver, Mzonke Maloney and Dumi Mparutsa. This zine uses the act of waiting for someone to arrive, specifically Joshy Pascoe, as its basis. These zinesters are looking at defining image use as a colloquial language combining the images used with news headlines from the day that they were waiting for Joshy’s arrival. This combination of news headlines as image labels is intended to mimic the way that text is added to imagery in meme creation. They explain in our interview that this union is imposed as an emphasis on the disparity of news image reception in contrast with socially constructed images and how they are received.

    The idea for the self-published piece was brought to life after Joshua Pascoe saw an image of Keenan on an insta story which led to Joshua’s instant engagement. Evidently liking what he saw, he jumped on the DM train and asked Keenan for an impromptu shoot in which he planned to finish the remainder of the frames left on his roll of film. The images that made it into the zine were captured while the act of waiting on Joshua took place. When asked why they believe the act of waiting for someone’s arrival was significant enough to base an entire zine on they tell me that their self-published content is aimed at challenging the entire concept of significance in relation to the fundamental elements of image creation.

    Image from ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ zine

    “The democratization of image making as an industry and a practice, has rendered all images equally significant, specifically within the cultural/social space. Our deliberate use of suburban tedium and non-activity looks to further emphasize the fact that there is no longer an accurate barometer, used to gauge the importance or non-importance of an image.” This statement holds a considerable amount of weight as we are living in a time where there is content on nearly every subject imaginable. We are bombarded by content whenever we open our web browsers. From small pop up adds advertising weight loss products, to celebrity scandals, food recipes, people dyeing their hair with Nutella spread and artistic short films of girls smashing their faces into food (yes I’ve actually watched this). The list is never-ending. Curating your content is a rather new idea and the first time I stumbled upon it was in the book by Michael Bhaskar titled ‘Curation – The Power of Selection in a World of Excess’, published in 2016. This book is a rather useful guide to removing actual bullshit content from your cyberspace experience.

    The team behind ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ explain that this zine was a way for them to express their views on the consumption of news imagery, and what people’s reactions are to them at present. “The rapid technological development of the various image generating mediums has prompted the reimagining of images, as more than just ‘artifacts of technology’ but rather as what Hans Belting has termed as being ‘the boundary between physical and mental existence’”. The inquiry addressed within this zine attempts to create a discernment between images within mental existence and images that move into a physical space within our current social context. “What becomes urgent and what remains trivial.”

    Image from ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ zine

    “I could somehow watch the news and instantly disconnect from the images and their implications (these images would not transcend past mental existence), yet Joshy could watch an insta story and respond immediately, bringing the image to the fore of his physical existence.” This zine thus questions the relevance of news imagery and its significance in modern day society.  This is done by almost saying that their social media interactions that led to a photo shoot and zine were more significant and impactful than news headlines were. They were more inclined to interact with a social post than they were to read the news of that particular day. And let’s be honest, I don’t engage with the news much, I can, however, tell you what my insta connections were doing this weekend in excruciating detail.

    News headlines were used as a form of tagging in this zine which is explained by the team as follows, “In attempting to synthesize those two thoughts; we realized that whilst we were waiting, absorbed by our own daily tedium and taking pictures of mundane suburbia (which is significant to us), much more “significant” events were taking place around the country, and the reconciliation of these two events occurring simultaneously would create the significance of the moment.”

    Utilizing screenshots from the DM thread between Joshua and Keenan, a timeline is visually built to create a context for the imagery that rests on the opposing pages. This timeline provides a temporal space in which the events were taking place and aided in establishing the overriding narrative of the zine. This zine is in my opinion, a storage space for a ‘live’ event taking place and is almost a self-published insta story/documentary piece of work addressing a complex question. All the content within the zine questions the idea of significance. The team tells me that these images are significant because of the mere fact that they exist.

    Image from ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ zine

    Explaining the connections made between social media, the act of image creation, texting and newspapers the creators tell me, “Whether it is the form of a meme, post or photo sharing, social media has made photographing a part of colloquial dialect for our generation. News making (documentary photography) was the most impactful form of image production from the past couple generations, but no longer holds the same weight, due to the rate at which images are being produced. The news now exists in synthesis with this colloquial/new language. The news of the day includes personal images, memes and other forms of social imagery.”

    This zine considers itself an anthropological study. It is explained as, “Regardless, the mass production of art means that all of art has dissolved into life or more accurately all of life has dissolved into art and therefore an inquiry into the use of medium must be considered anthropological.”

    Image from ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ zine

    Following my discussion with the creators of ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ I spoke to the young interracial queer couple behind ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’ zine, Boni Mnisi, and Leal after the launch of their zine on the 30th October in Cape Town. Boni expresses that the zine came about rather unexpectedly, “I wasn’t even entirely sure how to create one when I decided to announce to my Instagram followers that I was going to do it. I wrote and shared a painfully mediocre poem on my Instagram story and quickly explained it away as a sample of writing from a bigger body of work that I was trying to put together. I got DMs from so many people who were interested in getting involved and kinda got trapped into doing what I said I was going to do.”

    Cover image for ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’ zine by Gina Hendrickse

    The zine’s name was inspired by Lana Del Rey’s 2012 single that shares the same title. Boni regrets this title and explains that at the time she did not consider the exclusion that is linked to the word ‘girl’. “While we do actively recognize that trans and non-binary people who identify with our message may not themselves identify as ‘girls’, the word should have no place in our work from now on. As an intersectional feminist zine, we have an obligation to protect our trans and non-binary family, which includes eliminating the violent language that we have ourselves mistakenly employed. We want to rebrand and come back with something more representative of the community we hope to create. As of 2018, this working title is dead.”

    ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’ is made up of mostly contributed content from South African creative womxn that is bound together by Leal’s illustrations. This zine which consists of an online and print version made use of social media to promote itself.

    Photography by Alessia Dossantos

    Speaking about the launch of the first issue Boni tells me that they were overwhelmed by the response they received. Only expecting roughly 50 people, about 250 – 300 attended the event. “We began with an exhibition of our Cape Town based contributors’ work and shortly after began our entirely womxn DJ line-up featuring the insane DJ-duo ‘No Diggity‘. It was an incredibly sweaty night of grinding and vogue-ing. People expressed their gratitude for having a predominately womxn space where they were able to be themselves and feel safe. So we had lots of titties! Lots of girl-on-girl action and not a voyeuristic penis in sight! It was unlike anything I’ve experienced at any party.” Looking at the response that this zine has received as well as the intention of creating a safe and inclusive space for all womxn it can be said that this zine gives a voice to an underrepresented community and a safe space for self-expression.

    ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’ features content created by Afrah Mayet, Jemma Rose, Alice de Beer, Lianne O’Donnell, Claire & Abi Meekel, Amu Mnisi, Keo Borjeszo, Sandra Wilken, Marcia Elizabeth, Kayo Fay, Jesmin, Sasha de la Rey, Phoenix Falconer +30 more. In order to get their vision going, Boni and Leal raised funds in the months leading up to the launch. “This project was made possible by our generous friends and family whom we are so grateful for.” The zine will be available in Johannesburg soon and a digital free version is in the works.

    Photography by Gina Hendrickse

    Zines are a powerful tool for self-expression and can relate to literally anything as there are no rules to making a zine and they do not need to be commercially viable. A zine can be an experimental exploration and can be about something that the creators feel are relevant which is the case with ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ or they can address concerns or grant a voice to a community of likeminded often underrepresented individuals as is the case with ‘This is What Makes Us Girls’. The act of zine making has been described as the “mass amateurisation of publishing” (Bold 2017).  With the rise of digital folk culture over the decades, zines can be executed in a different way and do not necessarily have to be a physical print. Zines’ audiences are engaging differently today than they would have a number of years ago and zinesters are employing all the tools they have to voice themselves, such as social media. With the internet, there are more options for affordable cultural production with the ability of a global audience (Bold 2017). I believe that today, more so than ever it is easier to create a zine. Amateur creators have a space to explore a different type of cultural production with zines. So to zine or not? – yeah, if mainstream media won’t hear you out then please do zine! However, I do believe that there are many topics that were once considered experimental or non-commercial that have received attention from mainstream media in recent times. I like to think that people today are more connected, and aware of the narratives of some misrepresented and underrepresented communities which I attribute to internet culture. Zines do however still hold a place and creative sugar babies seem to love the heck out of them.

    Artwork by Marigold Petros
    Artwork by Kayla Armstrong
  • Conversationists: ‘One Fish Two Fish Blaue Fish Blue Fish’

    “We live it. We breathe it. We talk about it, because it festers inside our minds and we can’t stop…It’s an energy. It’s an energy that becomes this ball.”

    These are the words from a conversation between Riley Grant, Claire and Abi Meekel. Referring to themselves as the Conversationists, Riley, Claire and Abi along with Kayla Armstrong and Adilson De Olivieira will be turning Glory blue for their exhibition One Fish Two Fish Blaue Fish Blue Fish.

    The obsession over blue began with a concoction of whatsapp conversations, readings about the rhizome and teasing out understandings of semiotics earlier this year. In a sense, the whole process from conceptualization to the production of their works and soundscapes can be seen as an artwork being sculpted through time and digital codes. Thinking about conversations around the colour blue may seem confusing, but this exhibition will reveal that it more than an obsession with a colour.

    They are exploring blue as an image, as a sound, as a feeling and something more. With each combination of images, soundscapes and feelings, the meaning of blue is detangled and entangled once again, but never entangled in the same way. The exhibition is therefore, not so much a fixation on the word blue, but more an exploration of semiotics; choosing to work with blue and unfold what blue signifies to themselves and others.

    In a way they are thinking about changing the meaning of blue…or not.

    Be sure to check out their exhibition at Glory on the 6th of July. Below is a teaser and an invitation to see, feel and experience blue in a new way.

  • Meëk: aspiring to create the future of art

    Abi and Claire Meekel present under the collective Meëk. They have swiftly become a feature within the South African art scene dabbling in various forms of expression. You may recognize them as the sisters who modeled for Tarryn Francis or the sisters in the recent film by Aart Verrips or perhaps you know them as the DJ’s from AIR 2.0. However you know them, almost everyone in the art community in South Africa today has heard about them or seen their murals around Johannesburg. I met up with the 21 year old artists at a bakery in Melville. They walked in with a calmness about them, and Abi still had a blue paint mark on her neck from painting a mural beforehand. The blue of the paint accentuated her blonde hair and bold features. Claire’s red polo neck hugged her small frame. After we ordered our drinks, we began to talk about the various parts of their artistic practices.

    The Meekels were born in Amsterdam and lived there for seven years, hardly able to speak English. They then moved to Johannesburg and attended Parkview Junior where English became a part of their lives. Art has always been an integral part of the Meeks’ lives. Their mother is an artist and their father is an installation artist.

    “It has always been in our blood and in our faces. My dad would sit me on his lap and he would edit with me and with Claire on his computer.’’ – Abi Meekel

    “My mom would give us drawing pencils and pens when we were like 2 years old and we would sit there and draw and we loved it.” – Claire Meekel

    Meëk unfolded at the end of the Meekels’ matric year when they went on holiday in Europe. During this three-month period they decided that they wanted to create something, whether it was a brand, or an art collective or a movement. They were largely influenced by the art in Europe, from the graffiti on the walls to the architecture they were surrounded by. One day they sat down and just started drawing, and didn’t stop. And so Meëk was born.

    In speaking about this process the Meeks say that they created a character. Feeding off each other’s energies and shared background they decided to work as a collective. “It is more of our left leg or our right hand. It’s something; it’s an experience we have had as twins or sisters. It’s our pasts, our difficulties. It is what happens when we just come together. And it is very deep in a sense. It is also very playful. It’s like taking two halves and making it whole, almost.”

    The Meekels state that the older they get the more friction is evident between the two of them. Going to university led them to grow into individuals focusing on their own artistic practices. The Meekels are currently studying at Wits. Claire has always dreamt about being a photographer or a cinematographer and is currently specializing in cinematography. Abi specializes in sound and directing and has been playing the piano for nearly 14 years. Both sisters express that even though Meëk has a large following they have a need to work as individuals as well and find their own unique voices. They have already started branching out, with Claire having her own separate photography account on Instagram called @El_mno.

    @El_mno, Claire explains, is about close-ups of peculiar textures that make the viewer question what the object is that is photographed. She tells me that these pictures are all taken with her phone and then cropped out, and not edited. She enjoys the quality of the images and the restrictions that are enforced with a phone camera. The oblivious nature and confusion of subject matter that the images portray is what Claire finds appealing.

    Inspired by director David Lynch whose style can easily be described to resemble a nightmarish, fantastical dream, the Meeks conceptualize the soundscapes of their projects. “It’s a feeling. Like an atmosphere. An ambiance. It becomes a lot more difficult for people to relate to because it is a background thing. It’s something behind your head. In your head.”

    The Meeks aspire to create the future of art, but still take from the past and apply what inspires them into their practice. Becoming public figures in the art world at a very young age, they believe it has to do with their generation and the way the world is moving at this moment in time. They started putting their work up everywhere and took care to manage their social media presence. They have also been backed by their friends whom they collaborate with from time to time.

    Meëk is not about flawless imagery or content but instead they focus on creating a raw, unpolished aesthetic in their work. In their collage work they like to play with the fact that Photoshop is, in common practice, used to create perfect imagery but instead they warp normal perception with cutting up and duplicating parts of images. The twins have a uniform style and perspective that leans towards experimental that I like to think of this as cutting edge. “It’s just an image, it is nothing else. It’s not real. It is a moment in time. And you are editing over it. It’s distorting, changing.”

    The Meekel sisters are a part of Autonomy Wave‘s first micro residency, Future 76, and will be showing their work this Friday alongside artists that they consider to be their friends. Believing that this micro residency will push young South African artists to a new level they are excited to have been chosen for the first wave.

  • AUTONOMY WAVE: Future 76 // Meeting the Artists

    The exhibition Future 76 under AUTONOMY WAVE will take place on the 30th of June. We would like to introduce the artists who will be collaborating for this exhibition.

    Jéad Stehr @mistehrjead

    “I borrowed my dad’s camera one day when I was 12, promising to return it after I took a few shots, and to this day I still haven’t brought it back to him. At first, it was arbitrary subjects, like clouds or a pipe that looked interesting, but as I started to fall more in love with working with the camera, the more I loved coming up with concepts and being able to relay the idea through the camera. I loved the ability to communicate an idea to someone that would be indescribable otherwise. The act of transferring your thoughts to another person. It’s a way of changing beliefs and opinions.

    Generally, I write long pieces or poems to accompany my work. Sort of like a description trying to capture the essence of the photo. Sometimes the poem inspires the photo, and other times I scramble for words to bring meaning to my work. I like subverting the viewer’s intentions and serving up ideas and ideals that make a viewer think. A lot of the time I like to work with models of colour because I’m very passionate about creating a safe space for POC. Where they can look at a piece and relate to it themselves, which is something we don’t get to do often in the media.

    I really like the idea of this project. Giving the youth a platform to exhibit themselves is so important in a country where funding for the arts is lacking and we are in dire need of fresh creative talent. The broader theme of self-narration in relation to the city is also quite perfect for me. We are going through a time, not only in Johannesburg, but South Africa as a whole, where hate is running rampant, and I think this project could be used to bring a mirror to the behavior and actions we are constantly being bombarded with via the media.”

    Doodle by Jéad Stehr

     

    Seth Pimentel @african_ginger

    “My name is Seth Pimentel.

    I’m a 22 year old illustrator and visual artist.

    I was born and raised in the city of gold, Johannesburg.

    My art comes from a side of me I don’t like. It stems from my own self deprecating thoughts. Sometimes your greatest motivation is your own self hatred. I know that’s rather macabre, but sometimes pain is the greatest catalyst of growth.  I illustrate, so I draw whatever I feel and whatever I think flows from me. It’s in itself is my own therapy.

    I’m a young artist in my city; I fall into the category of the youth. This is our month, and this is our opportunity to create together. We learn and love from our collective creativity shared.”

    Doodle by Seth Pimentel

     

    Cahil Sankar @cahil

    “My Name is Cahil Sankar, and I’m a 19 year old Photographer from Johannesburg. I started taking photos from a very young age, and found that it was one of the few things I could not stop doing. Having severe ADHD, I was surprised at how something as simple as picking up an old point and shoot camera, could suddenly quieten my mind. Photography allowed me a stillness that I hadn’t ever experienced before.

    My mom worked for the ANC’s intelligence structures during the Apartheid era, and I feel that that has strongly influenced my political ideas as well as the images I am drawn to capture.  Through my photography, I aim to hopefully, portray honest and vulnerable narratives and emotions of my subject matter. I feel that being able to observe other peoples’ stories, has allowed me to shape my own narrative as a person of colour in our society. Having the creative freedom to interact with so many different people, I have come to realise how important creativity and the arts are, in terms of youth self-empowerment.

    South Africa has a large number of talented youth, and because of this I feel incredibly privileged to have been given this opportunity to work in collaboration with some brilliant young artists. Thank you Bubblegum Club.”

    Doodle by Cahil Sankar

     

    Mariam Petros @disorganizedgoat

    Mariam Ekaterini Petros, born in Johannesburg, South Africa. Inspired by artists like Tretchikoff, Kahlo and Dali. Petros is on the path of discovering her individual style. She works predominately with ink but practices with a variety of mediums. She attended the National School of the Arts. Petros participated in the Youth Arts Massif Exhibition in 2016 at the King Kong Building in Johannesburg. Petros is currently a tattoo apprentice at the Emerald Rain Tattoo Parlor and is studying Printmaking at The Artist Proof Studio.

    “I’m drawn to the project in a sense that I find it difficult to display my art on platforms other than on social media, with a disadvantage of being a part of the youth art culture, this project forms an opportunity that creates a platform for youth artists. I’m especially interested in this project in particular as it is based in the CBD which I’ve grown up in and have always had a love/hate relationship with. I’m looking forward to exploring the different tasks that come with this project and being able to collaborate with fellow young artists.”

    Doodle by Mariam Petros

     

    Abi & Claire Meekel @meek.meekier.meekest

    “The Meëk journey began 2 years ago. Meek is ultimately a movement and a social experiment to see how many people will follow and be inspired by what Meëk does. We love working together with other artists to expand this movement. It will be interesting to see how meek can collaborate with some of the artists in the Bubblegum project.

    I’m eager to use the given space as a medium to expand Meëk as a sort of progressive installation. This meaning that both Claire and I have discussed that we will do several illustrations, paintings, prints, small sculptures that merge into the space, so that it becomes a small little world that the viewers can partake in. We will definitely photograph and document our progress on social media so that our audience can grasp our context and creative process. The idea is that we inspire youth to create their own art. Show people that we are young artists ready to create and speak to the world, and that we are not confined by the existing art world. There aren’t limitations; we are in an infinite dimension.

    A little bit about Meëk:

    We have a list of mediums we work with some of which include animation, illustration, film, embroidery, sculptures, installations, design, graffiti, fashion and painting. It is interesting to work with different mediums because it also allows us to explore and progress. A valuable concept in the existence of Meëk is that it travels through different forms and dimensions which embodies the main concept. Meëk is our left foot. It’s a part of us but it isn’t everything. It is not who we individually are as artists. Meek simply is; a collaboration, a part of the two of us. We still have a few more worlds to show you.

    Sound and Photography are important mediums that I often experiment with but I mostly work with these mediums outside of Meëk, individually.”

    Doodles by The Meeks

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth