Tag: performance artist

  • Gavin Krastin – The embodiment of unveiling

    Gavin Krastin’s name has been popping up in art circles for some time now, and is often accompanied by shocking titles, graphic images, or sensational writing in an attempt to translate a performance into a written text. However, through conversation with the artist about his practice, it quickly became apparent that a critical and considered project was underway, and that elements of horror and shock were used as formal conceptual devices in service of this project.

    If being an artist wasn’t risking enough, venturing into performance certainly is. Despite bemoaning and often calling out the existing structures for not providing enough support for performance artists; not taking enough risks “due to the dreaded F word: funding,” Krastin has not let this hold him back. He challenges not only artists, but “curators, funders, festivals and programmers too, who too often expect artists to take risks but take little risk themselves, or in some instances turn their back on you when your risk doesn’t quite turn out as planned (no doubt reducing one’s art to a purely monetary value and an exercise in branding).” His work is bold, and his practice is creative, finding ways to sustain himself and his projects despite the obstacles.

    ‘Omnomnom’ performance photographed by Sarah Schafer

    He has been teaching and working at universities (UCT and Rhodes) for the past 6 years as a para-academic, or as he referred to himself, tongue-in-cheek, as “an academic wet nurse.” He has been teaching artists in the theatre-making, contemporary performance and movement studies arenas. Facing the struggles of working in an institution head-on, Krastin’s pedagogical approach, much like in his art practice, is to “stir curiosity and entice a playing field of questioning,” with the risks of such “stirrings” being vital to embarking on “radical embodied research.” Teaching is not simply a side-job, but rather Krastin considers the aspects that comprise his practice as “largely inseparable; as if his arts practice, teaching, research, facilitation and curation create an asymmetrical web of sticky intersecting trajectories, and thus the critiques of whiteness at university level continue to influence him and his socially-engaged work.”

    While directing is something in his repertoire, when it comes to his own performances Krastin uses his own body, as he cannot “expect someone else to endure” what he imagines. He uses his body as a means to “occupy, subvert and challenge notions of presentation and representation (which almost act as an incubator of historical trauma).” The performances are grotesque because the body is grotesque and shocking, but has been hidden behind “constructed compartments, boarders and adornments such as culture, religion, politics, language, names and epistemologies in order to contain, control, conceal and rationalise our human messiness.” He views his artistic project as one that “unveils such structures, embodying a body for what it is – a network of organs in extremity and oppression, but desiring production.” This minor revolt against the status quo is one that arises from a place of surprising vulnerability, humility and courage.

    ‘Pig Headed’ performance photographed by Sarah Schafer

    Krastin is ambitious and involved in many projects: He is assisting in an upcoming choreographic work authored by Alan Parker and Gerard Bester with the Dance Umbrella in March. He is also curating a group show of performance art in Cape Town, called ‘Arcade’, by young and/or recent Capetonian graduates – a venture which is sponsored by the National Arts Council and the Theatre Arts Admin Collective, resulting in paid artists – “because one can’t pay the rent with experience alone.” Currently Krastin even has some “performance detritus, or relics and used paraphernalia,” from his performance Pig Headed on display as part of a group exhibition called Provenance: A Performance Art Object Exhibition at Defibrillator Gallery in Chicago. A feature at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, festivals and gallery shows around the country and a creative research residency in Switzerland – it’ll be hard to miss this enigmatic artist in 2018.

    ‘Epoxy’ performance photographed by Owen Murray
  • Questioning Performance Art and Narrating the Stories of Transnational Africans

    Oroma Elewa is a visual and performance artist that identifies as a transnational African. Born in Nigeria, she relocated to New York when she was 15 years old, where she now lives and practices her art, intertwined with time in Marrakesh. She is known for facilitating the path towards a specific African aesthetic that can be characterised as “both African and cosmopolitan” according to the Observer. As someone who has inhabited various spaces, her viewpoint is one that carries the weight of having lived on either side of the Atlantic.

    Oroma’s original interest lay in telling the stories of other Africans that live a shared experience with her in her publication Pop’Africana that ran from 2008 – 2014. “It was for the very educated, well-travelled, cultured African, particularly those who were living in the world in global cities like New York, London, Berlin etcetera. I also wanted to create a certain aesthetic that did not exist for African bodies in the magazine space.” With the rise of social media and people’s ability to tell their own stories she transitioned into a new chapter – telling her own stories as a performance artist.

    Rehearsal still from ‘Piece 6’ of ‘Crushed Guava Leaves’

    Her decision was to immerse herself in performance by means of enrolling at the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute. “It was my art that drove me to shelter and canopy what was missing in fashion for the African cosmopolitan.” With all of this change Oroma came to the realization that she wanted a different, new way to tell stories and that she wanted to start that process by telling her own.

    “I felt like my personal story was getting lost. I’ve always written, I’ve always taken pictures but the reason I had to take up photography and pick the models and style was because what I wanted to do hadn’t been seen and hadn’t been done.”

    Her latest project takes a tangible form, a book that is described on the artist’s website in the following words “Crushed Guava Leaves is a performance primer. It is performance as play, as identity, as politics, as language and as mannerism. It is a collection of performable short stories – cultural snapshots – borne out of my memories, dreams, encounters, conversations, experiences and observations. All primed to be performed and interpreted through sound and movement, on stage and on film. Each piece ranges in heft and weight, from detailed recountings to fleeting impressions. Yet all invite reflection on the canon of performance art – on what can be performed and what is valuable material for cultural performance. Crushed Guava Leaves is an invitation to immerse in an evocative textual and aural landscape inspired by my remembrances.”

    Oroma is concerned with personal memories, lived experience and telling a story. Since the term artist was coined, artists all over the globe have been trying to make sense of their lives and the world around them. Oroma’s concept is therefore not singularly distinct. What gives her work and conceptual ideas weight is that she is someone who saw the tear in the fabric of the society she is situated in that has misrepresented or completely ignored the narrative she chooses to address – that of the transnational African. Moreover, Oroma’s work is aimed at making her viewers question the basis of what can be considered a performance piece and in this she succeeds.

     

  • Loui Lvndn: Chasing the Princess

    With his debut album ‘Your Princess is in another Castle’, Johannesburg based artists Loui Lvndn presents a body of work with a clear concept and narrative. On the album the singer, songwriter, rapper, performing artist, visual artist and writer uses the video game character Mario and his repetitive quest to rescue his princess as a metaphor for the search of happiness. “Our character is failing to find this princess and the princess is anything, it’s love, your aspirations, the best version of yourself, success. All of those things,“ notes Loui Lvndn.

    Told in a linear fashion, the album follows the exploits of the main character from a cold-hearted, ego driven place to meeting a girl and bringing her into his life, while slowly falling in love with her, before being overcome with jealousy and insecurity, before losing the her in the lifestyle through which they met and ultimately becoming the person he was before they met again. “With the album I resolved to ending the story with two endings. In one ending the repetitive nature of it seizes once the main character Loui achieves this happiness. He finds it in one. And the other ending is recurring. It’s sometimes about the journey. You revel in the moment and the experience of it all. Sometimes you actually do find it. Which is not to say you lose it and you search again. So I added both endings because there is a duality,“ muses Loui Lvndn.

    The album also sees Loui Lvndn in full control of all aspects, from the art direction, to the narrative and the composition. “This is the first time I got full control over what these melodies were doing. What these compositions were like. So I created everything from scratch. For the first time I think this entire body of work is exactly what I sound like today.“ To add the final touches to the album he worked with London-born, Knysna-based producer Jumping Back Slash. “He helped finesse and refine all of the sounds, make them listenable. But he did a super job because he tuned into the wavelength that I was on and actually even took it a step further.“

    Despite presenting dual outcomes to the narrative on the album Loui Lvndn believes that the search for one’s metaphorical princess is continuous. According to Loui, “success will always take a step forward as I take a step forward. So I don’t personally think I’ll ever find it. No matter how successful I am. I can have success and still be looking for it and I can have love and still be looking for it. It just seems like that sort of play.”