Tag: collaborative practice

  • Love is a Difficult Blue // Cathartic Moments in Collaborative Practice with Ghada Amer & Reza Farkhondeh

    Washes of colour bleed into pools of pleasure. Delicately drawn and intricately articulated. Forms of flesh emerge from thread. The intersection of love and lust. Interjected by a moment of escape from a solitary echo-chamber. Lured by siren call of paint and brush – lifting the veil of separation. Transitioning from viewer to maker. Transgressing from one space to another. Liberation from the binding constructs of one’s own perception, into another dimension.

    The moment Reza Farkhondeh put paint to one of Ghada Amer’s canvases he experienced a cathartic release. An instant free from his own practice. At the time she was away traveling,on seeing what he had done, she was initially shocked and upset. However, over time she warmed to the collective piece. Reza described the experience as “a meeting of two minds…You can create and also watch – you are a part of it, but also not.” The dynamic tension between presence and separation is integral to their collaborative practice.

    Since the early 2000’s they have explored a relationship founded on trust and reciprocity. While working out of their studio in Harlemthey still maintain individual identities and autonomy while engaging in collaborative space. Navigating this can at times be challenging. However, overtime Ghada and Reza have carved tools to combat conflict. Combined authorship is at the crux of their decision-making process. The two artists flip a coin to see who will place their signature above the other’s and hold a secret ballot to decide which of the works are finished. If the outcome does not reveal two affirmative votes, then the piece is further worked into. These democratic systems are used as effective tools to avoid potential moments of tension and ensure a fair trade.

    Their current show, Love is a Difficult Blue opened at Goodman’s Cape Town Gallery on the 18th of January and runs through to the 24th of February.The work explores notions of women and nature as both bearers of life – captured within an industrial patriarchal system of exploitation and oppression. Ghada enlists the female form as an archetypal icon – constructed from an amalgam of images. She uses these bodies, charged with notions of desire, to subvert stereotypes created by the white western male gaze. Intentionally provocative, the figures act as catalysts for conversation around the conventions of art.

    Her use of thread and embroidery stemmed from a frustration around not having access to the ‘man’s world’ of painting. In an interview with Brett Littman she recalled that in 1991 she decided that, “in order for me to paint, I would need to come up with my own technique – which was using the traditional women’s technique of sewing.” Reza describes the forms as “mechanical woman” – rooted in reproduction and systematically flattened through the process of embroidery. This connects to the historical erasure of women and female artists in the western cannon – something Ghada experienced in the curriculum while studying at École Nationale Supérieure d’Arts à la Villa Arson in France.

    This art school also happened to be the site at which they met, in 1988. At the time, Reza was completing a MFA in video and short film. Prior to his engagement with images of the natural world, he worked on a series called Made in China. The series of oil paintings depicted objects that appeared in Dollar Stores – all worth 99 cents. This was followed by a depressive episode – one which was broken by the conceptual freedom of working with landscapes and the catharsis of collaboration. “I guess what broke me out of this self-doubting period was when I painted on Ghada’s canvas in 2000.”

    The two have unified their practice through a process of exchange.  Ghada and Reza both begin in their mark-making working independently on individual canvases, once content, this is followed by exchange for the other to imprint upon. Reza remarked on the moments of voyeurism the shared studio enables – allowing brief windows into each other’s work and process. The pair however, are very careful not to disrupt the other’s practice in those early tentative moments – providing space for the work to evolve quietly.

    Initially their collaboration was established purely as a visual juxtaposition of medium and style. However, this organically grew into integrated layers – with each artist playfully trespassing into the other’s domain. These moments of slippage occur when Reza traces the female form and Ghada raises her brush to his botanical subjects.

    It is in collaboration that the nature of art is revealed  – Steve Lacy

  • Fortune Shumba and Dubokaj Collab on an Emotional Dub Release

    I know pretty much fuck all about Reggae and Dub other than the UB40 tapes my mom would play in her Uno Fire, and nights out at Cool Runnings. I also saw Damian Marley live in a haze of smoke at Blue Lagoon for Zakifo. That’s about it. Other than that, they’re not really genres I’ve ever gotten into. Like, I smoke a lot of weed, but not enough to bop to dub at home. And reggae has just kinda always felt like Gospel music for Rastas.  

    So, that I find myself listening to ‘Dubokaj Meets Fortune Shumba’ on repeat is a new experience. I find myself entranced by the experimental reggae and dub beats of Dubokaj and hypnotised by Fortune Shumba’s soulful vocals. On Soundcloud, the release is tagged as reggae but 3 of the 7 songs are dub mixes. I’m not great at telling the difference tbh. Dub is what reggae sounds like when played in the bath, right? Cause this definitely has that dreamy underwater feel with synths echoing through the haze.

    Lyrically, Fortune cynically explores lust, love, and relationships. From the opener of Trinidad Babies, in which he swears it isn’t a love song, to the moody Nobody in which he laments through a vocoder how much nobody knows how much he misses “you”, Fortune takes a more emotional and sentimental approach than I typically wouldn’t expect from music I typically associate with potheads.

    I don’t know too much about the swiss producer Dubokaj, unfortunately, although his work on this project makes me want to explore more of his catalogue. I do know, however, that Fortune has shown he can’t be pigeon-holed and has added his touch to a variety of beats by collaborating with a wide range of artists over the last 2 years. From his ‘Dawn EP’ in 2015, to now, the back-up dancer for Moonchild has steadily been putting together a body of work that’ll see him in the foreground of stages in days to come.

  • Entering the Ring of Interdisciplinary Collaborative Practice // The Centre for the Less Good Idea

    The Centre is a space to follow impulses, connections and revelations. It’s a physical space for artists to come together over two seasons every year and for curators to bring together combinations of text, performance, image and dance, because an ensemble sees the world differently to how one individual does. – Bronwyn Lace

    The pulsing jabs of boxing gloves ricochet around the arena. A stage set for the reverberations of recited lines delivered and directed. Intercepted by imagined instruments. Recited in conversations and in the nightly dreams of dancers. A performance of muscle choreographed through memory. A collaborative curation. Experimentally articulated. Tentatively, drawn out from behind the curtain comes, the Less Good Idea.

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    Derived in part from a Twana proverb, The Centre for the Less Good Idea debut season gathers more than 60 practitioners in the fields of acting, dance, poetry, writing, music, visual arts, film and even boxing. Convened under the guidance of curators, Khayelihle Dominique Gumede, Lebogang Mashile, Gregory Maqoma and William Kentridge. Core curators had been in conversation for many months prior to this explosion of talent and all contributing artists mobilized for a workshop series in December 2016 to further explore and expand the established concepts.

    Bubblegum delved into conversation with the Centre’s animateur, Bronwyn Lace. She described her role as bringing “life, momentum and energy to the space as well as to pull the threads of networks not easily within reach towards the Centre”. In sussing the Joburg and South African art scene she will continue to observe and engage with artists – identifying and introducing collaborators to one another for future seasons.

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    “The Centre is a physical and immaterial space to allow discoveries in the process of making work to flow.” She continues, “Often, you start with a good idea. It might seem crystal clear at first, but when you take it to the proverbial drawing board, cracks and fissures emerge in its surface, and they cannot be ignored. It is in following the secondary ideas, those less good ideas coined to address the first idea’s cracks, that the Centre nurtures, arguing that in the act of playing with an idea, you can recognise those things you didn’t know in advance but knew somewhere inside you.”

    Born out of a desire to foster a space for artists in the city, the Centre was initiated and funded by William Kentridge. Collaboration and a sense of play are at the crux of this interdisciplinary project. “It wants to be a rare and safe space for failure, for projects to be tried and discarded because they do not work.” Collaborators were initially invited right at the start of conceptulising a new season. Conversations based on existing work were explored as well as their ability to extend into the interdisciplinary setting. “The conceptual crux of season 1 is to introduce, hold and push the concept of the less good idea by bringing multiple disciplines in to one space and asking them to invent, to test and to play.”

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    Season 1 will launch this week on Wednesday the 1st of March with four short plays by Samuel Beckett. Events including film installations, collaborative performances and unconventional boxing matches will continue throughout the week. The Centre will expand even further with Season 2 launching in October 2017 under an entirely new set of curators. Season 3 will follow in the early stages of 2018.

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