Tag: Gallery Momo

  • Intimate encounters and treasured tales

    Walking into Gallery MOMO for the opening of their new show, Exceeding Return by artist Curtis Talwst Santiago, I’m greeted by a small perspex box mounted and spot-lit on the large white wall. It is the only thing on the wall and its magnetic power is undeniable. I’m drawn to it, but it’s only when my nose is millimetres from the box that I see what it encases.In the centre of a small jewellery box sits a tiny sculpture of a Zulu woman breastfeeding a baby, no bigger than a centimetre in height. The colours are exquisite and the detail immaculate, and just as I’m busy wondering how on earth something this minute could have been made, I’m aware of a face very close to mine, someone leans in just as I do. Necessary hellos are exchanged because of the close proximity, and before long we’ve introduced ourselves and the conversation begins to flow.

    Nubian Origin Story According to the Artist

    A few minutes later and I’ve moved through to another room in the gallery, looking at a miniature diorama of a number of tiny figures enjoying a moment at the beach, when the same situation arises with another onlooker, and before long another scintillating conversation has begun. Twice more the same events played out in almost the same way with different people. Whilst meeting new people in a gallery setting is not a foreign thing on opening nights, here the intimacy of the works almost demands it from the onlookers. Where much contemporary art is large in scale and often pushes the audience back, creating a sort of reverent intimidation, these works beckoned to you as only a close friend with a precious secret can.

    Weaving together scenes from everyday life with the historic and traditional, Santiago manages to summon forgotten modes of storytelling. Speaking to the artist, he mentioned that the works are made to be held and passed around, carried with one as a story committed to memory might be. Addressing his own personal genealogy and ancestry with his ‘Ancestor Drawings’ and Nubian series of monochromatic black ring box dioramas, Santiago speaks to the historical through his present practice. In one such work in the Nubian series, Venus mimics the composition of Botticelli’s famous painting, The Birth of Venus, thereby inserting the black figure into the discourse of Renaissance art history, where historically the black body has been largely excluded.

    Venus

    It is not only the stories that Santiago tells which grab the viewers’ imagination, but the way he tells them. Clearly he is incredibly spatially astute, not only in utilising the tiny scale to draw the audience in, but with each work, demanding that it be approached in a new way. What are you doing? Just chilling with some friends invites you to look down on the jewellery box and into a library, whereas Nubian Origin Story According to the Artist uses the lid of the box to create a backdrop for the figure portrayed. The tight, intricate detail of the miniature sculptures is juxtaposed with the loose and expressive drawings and works on canvas, giving us viewers a window into the possibilities that lie with an artist as multifaceted as Curtis Talwst Santiago. An exciting and refreshing show, not only are we given incredible art, but new potential relationships. I must warn you that you will leave disappointed, but only because the world you return to is not as inviting as the one you just discovered.

  • Khaya Witbooi // A Floral Kingdom of Historic Imperialism

    Soil of the land pours fourth from a concrete fissure. Protea graves lie on an earthy deathbed. The indigenous plants strewn across the floor. Blood-red seeps from a glinting gold surface. A legacy of Eurocentricity. Wilting in the sun. “The garden itself as a place of symbolic and material production, where sublime beauty still emerges as a surplus value of the dirty hands of others labor.”

    History Begins with a Garden is captured within the surrounding greenhouse-glass walls of Gallery MOMO. Artist Khaya Witbooi collaborated with Italian born, Barcelona based curator Mariella Franzoni to put the show together. In his work Khaya digs up the roots of a colonial history. In exploring the, “genealogy of gardens and gardening in South Africa, bringing to light its relation with slavery, land dispossession and nationalist propaganda.”. Gardens appear at the intersection of both beauty and violence.

    Khaya Witbooi_Made in SA (Anna de Kooning)_ 2017_80x80cm
    Made in SA (Anna de Kooning)

    “The rhetoric of aesthetic and civilization was at the origin of the colonial and apartheid enterprises that built the Company’s Garden and, later, Kirstenbosch in Cape Town as symbols of power.”. The systematic trafficking of plants mirrors the enslaved movements of human migration during colonisation. Rich and vibrant in colour, Khaya’s complex images juxtapose a history of iconography grown from the garden of colonial South Africa with contemporary popular culture.

    Queen Elizabeth II, Jan van Riebeeck and Cecil John Rhodes are used to access the historical narrative of South Africa. Problematising their prevalence. Their positions of power are subverted through the use of CCTV cameras, the moon landing and Tweety Birds. South Africa’s historic mining practices are referenced through featuring the yellow Looney Tunes character – canaries were carried down to the depths of the earth in mine shafts to test for fatal levels of carbon monoxide or methane. In his pieces, a matrix of meaning are articulated through subtleties – a visual critique of the colonial seed.

    For a colonized people the most essential value, because the most concrete, is first and foremost the land: the land which will bring them bread and, above all, dignity.”

    ― Frantz Fanon

     

    Khaya Witbooi_Hortus Conclusus_2017_110x130cm
    Hortus Conclusus

     

    Khaya Witbooi_The Plant is a Flag_2017_300x200cm
    The Plant is a Flag

     

  • Art as the reflections of our times and the collector the preserver of our history: In discussion with Gallery MOMO creative director

    Art is more than just about the business that generates it. Gallery Momo is more than just a conduit for the sale of art but also the creation of works that seeks to challenge the ideas of those who enter her walls. Set in the leafy suburbs of Parktown North this gallery offers both collectors and art enthusiasts the opportunity to engage with works that:

    … keep pushing the boundaries of local and international markets. The gallery continues to support local and international young-and-upcoming talent through its renowned residency program. This program allows artists to exchange ideas and engage with the new environment (Gallery Momo, 2016).

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    I got to meet up and interview the creative director Odysseus Shirindza of Gallery Momo.

    Motlatsi Khosi (MK): Please explain how Gallery MOMO started and how you (Odysseus) became a part of its creative team?

    Odysseus Shirindza (OS): The gallery was founded in 2003 by Monna Mokoena to fill the gap in the market for a contemporary African art.  I joined the gallery late 2015 as the operations manager.

    MK: What have been some of the major hurdles and blessings in running the gallery and what advice would you give to black creatives and entrepreneurs when engaging the business aspect of the arts.

    OS: At the end of the day a business is business regardless of your background, the challenges are the same however that is not to say that overcoming those challenges is equally easy for everyone.  I’m fairly new with the gallery so the impact of my contribution only time will tell.  But the in the time I’ve been with the gallery, working with the artists that we represent has been a great blessing and the challenge is also managing the very same artist that make my work enjoyable.

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    MK: What role do you see black collectors playing in the art word? Is it all business or do they also have some sort responsibility to the creative arts within South Africa and the continent.

    OS: The role of the black collector is very important especially at this point in our civilization.  To quote Nina Simone, “An artist’s duty, as far as I’m concerned, is to reflect the times”.  Then in that case the collector’s duty is to preserve what the artists produce.  The more black collectors buy in to what the artists produce, the more we can be secure as a people that that our place in history is safe and that our stories will be told with integrity because our is in the custodianship of people who have vested interest.  It is our job as black people to collect and preserve our own history and/ through art.

    MK: Art and creatives from this continent are making waves and gaining a new thrust in popularity, both locally and internationally. What role does Gallery MOMO play in fueling this next wave in the consumption and appreciation of the arts?

    OS: Africa and African art and artists have become very recognizable on the international art scene.  Our main duty as a gallery still remains to break down barriers and expose the artists that we represent at best light and at the right platforms.

    Readers can learn more about the Gallery Momo and keep up to date with their upcoming exhibitions on their website, Facebook page and on Instagram.

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