Tag: digital artist

  • Mustafa Saeed – digital reimaginings of people and places in Somali

    Photography and other forms of digital imagery have the ability to unwrap the positive cloth that people in positions of power use to cover up the societal problems that they have not been able to address o have an active hand in perpetuating. Photographer and graphic artist Mustafa Saeed recognizes that releasing his shutter provides an engagement with these issues behind fabricated filters.

    His work titled Cornered Energies highlights the non-existence of youth platforms for youth in Somalia, as well as the lack of self-expression they face. The title of this work speaks to this directly, expressing how under these circumstances young people are forced to bottle up their creative energies, resulting in wasted energy that sits in the corner, untouched. Saeed photographed young people in various spaces that make up their everyday. Adding another layer to this engagement with suppressed energy, Mustafa interviewed the people he photographed about how they feel with regards to the lack of freedom to express their creative desires. The project culminated in a slideshow of images looping while the audio recordings of his participants provide voice and context to the visual narrative.

    Image from ‘Cornered Energies’

    Saeed’s work also sheds light on the high unemployment rate in Somalia. His photographic series, Division Multiplied, he depicts men sitting outside a telecommunication office in downtown Hargeisa reading newspapers in the hopes of finding job advertisements. Saeed’s ability to capture the raw reality many face demonstrates how this collective plight is more than a statistic. His humanist references for his work are clearly visible in these works.

    Image from ‘Division Multiplied’

    While a lot of his work reflects on the everyday issues that need to be addressed in Somalia, Saeed also finds it important to present a counter-narrative to the way in which his country is represented in Western media. Teaming up with eight other photographers, and tapping into the way in which apps such as Instagram provide a way to make counter-narratives reach the surface, he participated in the project Everyday Horn of Africa. The project also included photographers from Ethiopia. With the intention to dismantle the dominant visuals of their home  country, they took photographs that constructed an everyday that goes beyond images of poverty, and Western self-promotion through images of providing aid.

    Peace & Milk, 2015, Photography and digital collage

    To check out more of Saeed’s work visit his website or Facebook page. Below is the video for Cornered Energies.

  • Jacque Njeri on her ‘MaaSci’ series

    Artist and designer Jacque Njeri has always had a close relationship with art, which she expressed through various mediums growing up. She took this experimentation with art as a child and channeled it into formal training when she completed her degree in Bachelors of Art in Design.

    The aim of Jacque’s work is to look at everyday scenarios but through a whole new perspective. “It is almost as if to answer the hypothetical question, ‘If not this, then what else?’” she explains.

    In contrast to her previous Stamp Series, Jacque’s latest digital series titled MaaSci, a portmanteau of Maasai and Sci-Fi, sees Maasai people walking on the moon and traveling through space on UFOs, as well as sitting on or walking towards celestial objects on earthly terrains. Her strategic use of layering and taking into account the sitting and standing positions of the Maasai people she portrays in her images, allow the final images to come across as photographs rather than digital constructions. Jacque explains that the role of the Maasai people in this series “was to provide that rich cultural aesthetic to the different science fiction themes represented in the compositions.” Her images also speak back to the documentary-style photographs coupled with narratives that highlight African cultures and their traditions as occupying a kind of anachronistic place in the present. Instead the Maasai are seen to be inhabitants of both the past, present and future, playing with linear chronological thinking, and highlighting Maasai cyclical time.

    Artists from the continent are often categorized as Afrofuturists. Thinking about the almost immediate categorization, I asked Jacque what she thinks about this. She replied by saying, ‘I love it! It sets an African future apart from other futures. It alludes to a future for us and by us. It shows ownership of a voice in matters pertaining Africa…sort of.  I have been an Afrofuturism enthusiast even way before I started contributing to that genre.”

    Jacque has a number of projects that she is working on at the moment, but is planning on extending her MaaSci series given the positive reception that is has received.

  • Tabita Rezaire – Transforming the screen into a gateway for healing frequencies

    Johannesburg-based digital artist, intersectional activist and Kemetic yoga teacher Tabita Rezaire is spreading love and inviting healing through her screen-based artistic practice. Having moved to Johannesburg a few years ago from Paris, she has been continuing to work within the Internet’s ecology to confront the legacies of colonialism and address our collective need for healing.

    Tabita navigates her personal life and art embracing decoloniality – a theory and practice that involves a de-linking from the West and becoming one’s own centre. She encourages us to unlearn and reboot as she tries to connect with herself, people and life with love and gratitude, and with the intention to heal herself and others around her.

    Her work is geared towards a spiritual technology and thinking about how we can become spiritual humans beings again. Through her “digital healing activism” she challenges our cis-het-patriarchal-racist-capitalist system through the use of the screen as her medium. Bringing an awareness to African cosmologies and the sacred power of the womb, she presents a diagnostic of the pain felt by Trans/Queer/Black/Brown/Femme beings and proposes a strategy through decolonial technologies which can allow us to reconnect with ourselves, each other, the earth and our ancestors to bring about holistic healing and an outpouring of love.

    Tabita’s work transforms the screen into a gateway, inviting the viewer on a spiritual journey. The screen becomes an interface which allows access to therapeutic vibrations, healing frequencies and tools for working towards “soundness”.

    The womb is a prominent symbol in her works. This is a push back against the demonizing, shaming and disposing of women’s bodies and femme energies which has polluted our world through patriarchal structures. Tracing back to times when femme-ness was celebrated, Tabita is invested in restoring our relationship with the womb and reviving an understanding of its sacred, love- and life-giving power. For her, addressing this disconnection from the womb offers a door through which we can learn to love ourselves.

    tabita x bubblegum club 5

    Her first solo exhibition, Exotic Trade, will be taking place at Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg on the 8th of April. As a continuation of her digital decolonizing and connecting to the power that has come before her, this exhibition celebrates alternative ways of sharing and accessing information through what Tabita has called the “cosmos database”. As she has done with previous work, Tabita threads together ecology, digital technology and spiritual communicative practices to address the history and architecture of modern technology. She unearths hidden narratives, as in one of her works which discusses the origin of computing sciences being found in African divination. Her exhibition will also delve into ancestral communicative interfaces: the womb, sound, plants, ancestors and water as databases from which we can download information. She investigates water as a signal carrier from the internet to memories about the traumatic history of colonial routes, the disruption of oceanic ecologies, as well as the healing potential that water offers. The show includes six video arrangements and a series of five prints, a lightbox, and helper metal structures. She will include earthy materials such as copper and bismuth as a symbol of her desire to re-connect and celebrate with the earth.

    Analyzing the healing potentiality of sound, Tabita is also working collaboratively with FAKA, Hlasko, and Chi (Robert Machiri) to create a “healing soundscape” for the show. Her exhibition space will be used for a Kemetic yoga class on the 13th of April, followed by a conversation with Milisuthando Bongela from the Mail & Guardian. This transference of the experience from the screen and prints on display to an embodiment through physical movement speaks to Tabita’s emphasis sharing ancient wisdom in all areas of our lives.

    tabita x bubblegum club 4

    tabita x bubblegum club

    Special thanks to the Goodman Gallery, BDSM Dominatrix and Snake Bite Assist for supporting the shoot.

    Shoot Credits

    Photography by Paul Shiakallis

    Styling by Jamal Nxedlana

    Hair & Makeup by Orli Meiri

    Bondage accessories by Mistress Kink & Master Grant (BDSM Dominatrix)

    Snake handling by Arno Naude  (Snake Bite Assist)