Tag: Rose Gelderblom Waddilove

  • Artists Adam-Jon Williams and Rose Gelderblom Waddilove on gratitude, humility and performance

    Adam-Jon Williams and Rose Gelderblom Waddilove work together under the collective identity #AJRR, @AJWRGW or AdamJonRoseRoses. As a collective they create open source performance artworks.

    the wall
    The Wall – Alex Kaczmarek

    Adam-Jon and Rose Gelderblom began to work together quite seriously from 2015 after Rose came back from a trip to Palestine. They began to converse about similarities in their work and the kinds of themes they were wanting to address. They created the work The Wall, a performance that involves one person laying down bricks in an attempt to build a wall, and another person, with the same amount of speed and effort, removing these bricks. This performance reflects on cycles of oppression and solidarity, reflecting on the ways of the world. The Wall is the first installment of their larger project PERFORMANCE; ENGAGEMENT. This has been an ongoing project for the past three years which consists of 7 performance artworks, each of which comes with a set of instructions on how to execute these performances. Other performances include Strandloper which involved walking across crates on the beach, and Raft which involved building a raft to float amongst rocks in the shallow part of the beach.

    strandloper
    Strandloper, 2015 – Dennis Collins

     

    raft
    Raft, 2016 – Robyn Park-Ross

    The complementary writing style and practice between Adam-Jon and Rose creates a balance that culminates in each performance. An essential part of their performances are the collaborations that bring their work to life. For the opening of the Cape Town Art Fair they the piece An Open Letter to the Ones I Love and Have Loved Before was performed. With a custom mix produced by Vegar Nostveld Lien and Natalie Perel of WDR, along with loosely fit pants, sheer shirts and the ceramic earrings provided by various contributors, married together with their words and speak to their desire to collaborate with others on their work, as well as being able to bring to the fore the space they find themselves in at this point in the project; the desire to feel and show gratitude. A showing of gratitude to their audience, as the audience makes it more than a performance between Adam-Jon and Rose. A showing of gratitude to those who contribute to their project, as this makes each performance more than words on paper. A showing of gratitude to their families.

    open letters art fair
    An Open Letter to the Ones I Love and Have Loved Before, Cape Town Art Fair 2017 – Fabiana Seitz

    “[The audience] must be able to get lost in the art,” Rose explains. Through their multisensory  performance they managed to create a moment of pause in the overwhelming and sometime chaotic space of the Art Fair. The movement, the sound, the story unfolding; the viewer became consumed. Rose and Adam-Jon described this particular piece as an exercise of gratitude and humility. “It allows us a moment to rebalance and reflect, and go back [to other performances] with more conviction,” Rose explains.

    “They [the performances] are exercises that are filled with passion and intensity,” Rose adds. Their desire is to give this project to the world so that people can use it as a source of reflection and inspiration.

     

  • Skattie Celebrates – Spotlight on Rose Gelderblom Waddilove

    Fashion and design website Skattie has been piloting a new way to give emerging artists exposure with their  Celebrates parties. The concept is that a gallery space is hired out for one night only and turned into an exhibition/party.  There previous exhibitions looked at  Laura Windvogel and Unathi Mkonto, while this weekend’s will focuses on Cape Town artist Rose Gelderblom Waddilove.

    Rose trained in print media, but works across painting, performance and new media.  As she told us- ‘Stories of art and pain have motivated much of my research’. A recent trip to occupied Palestine had been especially significant- ‘it has allowed me an opportunity to reflect on the state of the nation in South Africa, the symbolic ending of apartheid and issues of solidarity and identity’.  This focus on the contemporary moment in South Africa incorporates a particular fascination with ‘the position of an individual within the crowd’.

    For her Skattie show she will be showing a broad spectrum of her prior work. These will include prints she made while studying at UCT and performance piece collaborations with artist Adam Jon Williams.  A particular highlight is the painting she made on the border wall in the West Bank.  The party will also showcase some of her new work, dealing ‘with major statistics, crowds, trauma and loss. This year marks 50 years since the declaration of District 6 as whites only area. 2016 marks 40 years since the 1976 Soweto Uprising as well as 20 years of the Constitution. My most recent work aims purely to begin to locate creative self-expression at this moment in time’.

    Alongside the exhibition, Skattie will be providing a downloadable online publication of Roses work, created in partnership with Art Africa magazine. The party will also feature a wide line up of dj’s for the evening. It starts at 6PM on Saturday at the Ava Gallery, 35 Church Street, Cape Town.

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