Tag: Market Photo Workshop

  • Theatrum Botanicum // the botanical world as a stage for politics

    Theatrum Botanicum // the botanical world as a stage for politics

    In a moment where debates about land are at their peak in South Africa, Uriel Orlow‘s Theatrum Botanicum on show at Pool Space in Johannesburg fertilizes ideas around the botanical world as a stage for politics through film, photography, installation and sound. This ongoing project follows the trajectory of most of his work; research-based contemplations with collaborative methodologies, focusing on specific locations and histories, combining various visual evocations with layered narratives.

    The beginning of the project was inspired by an accidental visit to Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens. Struck by the fact that most of the plant labels were in English and Latin, Orlow began to question what this means in South Africa where there are 11 official languages. This connects to a colonial history of exploration and conquest. Through this process botanists from Europe “discovered” new plants, and proceeded to name and classify them according to European systems of organisation. Through forcefully exporting this methodology for categorization and understanding, it displaced indigenous knowledge systems and views on the world. Orlow seeks to question this forced application of taxonomic methods, and in so doing unearths issues around assumed universality, colonialism and its legacies, plant migration, and how examining the botanical offers insight into labour, race relations, pleasures and sustenance within South Africa’s history.

    The significance of the work is twofold. Firstly, framing plants as databases, organic stores of information. Juicy, fleshy memory banks that can testify to South Africa’s political past and present, and offer alternative entry points from which we can assess and think about history and politics. Secondly, Orlow’s work ascribes plants a form of agency, presenting them as active participants in the link between nature and humans.

    Photography by Austin Malema

    The project offers encounters and observations that are gateways to meditations on the above. Grey, Green, Gold forms part of Theatrum Botanicum, and is up in Gallery 1989 at Market Photo WorkshopThe Fairest Heritage, a single channel video piece within the exhibition, perfectly exemplifies the larger aims of the project. Here Orlow, through his extensive research in the library of the botanical garden, found films that were commissioned in 1963 to commemorate the anniversary of founding Kirstenbosch by documenting its history.

    The film’s main characters – scientists and visitors – are all white, with the only people of colour featured being those who worked on the gardens. Orlow collaborated with artist and performer Lindiwe Matshikiza, who inserts herself in front of these film, viscerally speaking back to their contents. A performative contestation to this archive, placing herself into the frame as a protagonist existing outside of the frameworks of passivity and labour for people of colour created within the archival footage. This work also highlights that plants are not neutral and passive, with flowers attached to ideas around nationhood, segregation and liberation.

    To accompany the work, Orlow teamed up with editor Shela Sheikh on a book that catalogues the different works, but also connects with the research that is the seed from which project continues to grow. Writers were invited to contribute essays that do not necessarily respond to the works directly, but contemplate the thematics that come to the fore through their presence. Other artists with work relating to art, nature and history were also invited to share their work in the book.

    Both exhibition spaces are pollinated with works that share the entanglements between plants and us across time and space. Go inhale the fragrance of latent histories until 21 October at Gallery 1989, and 3 November at Pool Space.

  • Matt Kay // a spatial investigation with documentary photography

    Matt Kay // a spatial investigation with documentary photography

    Matt Kay is a photographer who grew up in the Natal Midlands. After spending some time in Johannesburg studying at the Market Photo Workshop, he subsequently became one of the lecturers. Matt was however drawn back to Durban, where he had lived for some time. The scenery, the beach front, the people of Durban are what Matt needs to construct his photographic narratives. Matt expresses that he builds his narratives from memory and that he regards his work as an introspective investigation.

    Matt was awarded the Tierney Fellowship and received the opportunity to work under the renowned photographer David Goldblatt. During his mentorship with Goldblatt Matt produced his series, ‘The Front’. The series is an ongoing exploration of space and who occupies it. In this series Matt seeks to document what the Durban beachfront space was at that moment in time. As has often been said, a photograph captures a moment in time. ‘The Front’ is confrontational and speaks about identity, diversity and the multi functional nature of the shared public space. Challenging preconceived ideas about the Durban beachfront, Matt’s body of work looks at a space that seems integrated however below the surface there are still lines of segregation.

    Image from ‘The Front’

    What makes the subject matter of Matt’s photographic investigation of interest is the nature of the beach front: it is a space unlike most in South Africa as it falls outside of race, class or wealth restrictions – the beach is open for all to appreciate. This series opens up a narrative exploration in which it’s consumer will come to recognize that this apparent shares space is not what it appears to be and is in fact a front. Matt’s observation in ‘The Front’, brings up the history of the Durban beachfront and the various bodies that take occupancy in the space.

    Matt has the ability to capture moments in photographs that I as a photographer would not necessarily look at with my naked eye and think, “Here is a photo worth taking”. He looks at things that seem ordinary, standard and he elevates these scenes into something extraordinary. Matt works as a documentarian capturing moments as they happen yet at the same time it truly does feel as though there had to be some level of choreographing subjects. I believe he has a unique eye and focus in his work with emphasis on narratives that he can construct from memory.

    In an interview with Between 10&5 Matt stated, “I like to think my photographs ask questions although I’m not really interested in the answers.” I feel however that Matt is in some way interested in his answers as his investigative series ‘The Front’ displays.

    Image from ‘The Front’
    Image from ‘The Front’
    Image from ‘The Front’
    Image from ‘The Front’

     

  • Bubblegum Club Stories Ep4

    In this week’s episode of Bubblegum Club Stories we feature Bogosi Sekhukhuni for his first solo exhibition with Stevenson gallery in Johannesburg, titled Simunye Summit 2010. We chat to founder of the online store RHTC, Mpumelelo Mfula, about their recently opened space in Braam and his vision for local streetwear. We also visit artist Blessing Ngobeni’s studio and he lets us in on what he has planned for the this year’s Joburg Art Fair. We bumped into the co-founders of fashion label Prime Obsession, the lovely Shelley Mokoena and Keneilwe Mothoa, at the Levi’s 501 launch in Sandton and they share some styling tips with us. We also feature young photographer Phumzile Khanyile’s first solo exhibition Plastic Crowns currently showing at the Market Photo Workshop.

  • Self-discovery through imagery – ‘Plastic Crowns’ exhibition by photographer Phumzile Khanyile

    Self-discovery through imagery – ‘Plastic Crowns’ exhibition by photographer Phumzile Khanyile

    Young photographer Phumzile Khanyile is showing her first solo exhibition titled Plastic Crowns at the Market Photo Workshop gallery in Johannesburg.

    Plastic Crowns is a journey of self-discovery,” Phumzile explained, “As a photographer I think the vision is more important than the equipment. I believe that when making a body of work there is nothing more important than honesty”. This guided her decision to include herself in her images. Using her personal experiences as a backdrop for larger conversations, the self-portraits in her exhibition try to unpack the expectations she carried from her grandmother around what it means to be a woman. This was the entry point for her to address the ways in which women’s bodies are closely monitored with regards to how we choose to present ourselves. “I wanted to figure out for myself what being female is,” Phumzile explained.

    Phumzile KhanyileFrame Allocations_12
    © Phumzile Khanyile, Plastic Crowns, 2016

    Choosing sexuality as the focal point, she uses symbols to talk back to these expectations. Balloons scattered on the gallery floor and featured in her photographs represent different sexual partners. Through this she speaks back to ideas around promiscuity, stating that she views having multiple partners as a choice and not a reflection on lack of morals. Given that these expectations and teachings come from how she grew up, her images play with understandings of family photographs by turning the idea of the family photo album on its head through telling the story of what happens after the idealized family photograph has been taken, and producing images that are not often seen in albums because they highlight flaws within the familial structure. During our conversation Phumzile pointed to a photograph of her standing next to a black coat hanging from the handles of a cupboard door. In the image she links arms with the coat, as if she was linking arms with another person. She explains that this particular photograph refers to the absence of her father. “It was really important for me to create this because I have lost all of my family albums at home. I wanted to create the feeling of something that is familiar.”.

    Phumzile KhanyileFrame Allocations_2
    © Phumzile Khanyile, Plastic Crowns, 2016

    To create the feeling of old family photographs and worn down photo albums, Phumzile covered her digital camera with a cloth. “I didn’t want them [the images] to have this clean sense or this technically correct thing about it,” Phumzile explained. Certain images come across as blurred, slightly out of focus and grainy, working hand-in-hand with her inversion of the family  photo album.

    Having been awarded the Gisele Wulfsohn Mentorship in Photography in 2015, Phumzile was mentored by photographer and filmmaker Ayana V. Jackson. Her exhibition will be up until the 19th of March.

    Check out more of her work visit her website or follow her on Instagram

    Phumzile KhanyileFrame Allocations_37
    © Phumzile Khanyile, Plastic Crowns, 2016

     

    Phumzile KhanyileFrame Allocations_23
    © Phumzile Khanyile, Plastic Crowns, 2016