Tag: The Point of Order

  • WYAA // Providing Platforms for the Emergence of Young Artists

    WYAA // Providing Platforms for the Emergence of Young Artists

    Cantilevered concrete extends into a crisply lit tower foregrounding the bright cerulean winter sky. Tire treads mark the intersection of an arterial road, the pulse connecting the suburbs of Johannesburg to the heart of the city. Adjacent, a narrow side street reverberates the sounds of lorries and delivery vans. The bustling sidewalk is grounded by rectangular forms – interjected by an iron grate ashtray. Indigenous foliage peppers a raised platform of slate stones. This is the corner occupied by The Point of Order.

    The Point of Order operates as a mixed-use project space managed under the exhibitions programme of the Division of Visual Arts at the Wits School of Arts. This year nine students were selected to participate in the Wits Young Artist Award – a prestigious event that aims to provide an exhibition platform for emerging artists. Notions of inherited legacy, gender, sexuality and mapping space were explored throughout the show.

    Allyssa Herman is interested in the way knowledge is produced around the kitchen table and domestic space. A kitsch ceramic canine inherited from her grandmother is central to the work A Shrine for my Bitch. “A shrine for my bitch, it’s just that. A shrine for my bitch. My bitch is an embodiment of me, an embodiment of the woman who have passed, who’s ideals live in me…This bitch has been sitting in my grandmother’s home watching me all my life, she deserves a shrine, she deserves to be praised. My bitch is both dead and alive. She is that bitch. We are that bitch. Bow down bitches!” The shrine, arranged with an abundance of fake flowers, family portraits, candles and doilies pay homage to Allyssa’s matriarchal lineage – the veil between life and death.

    Artworks by Lebogang Mabusela

    “I hate doilies. There is something very suspicious about the cleaning, masking, covering, and the needing to impress that comes with being a woman. The passing down of these doilies happens in those moments when mama’ tells me gore ngwanyana o kama moriri; ngwanyana ga a tlhabe mashata; ngwanyana o dula so, ga a tlaralle” says runner-up Lebogang Mabusela. Lebogang’s response to these crocheted signifiers of femininity and ‘black womanhood’ is to reimagine them through a series of monotype prints. “Doilies are used to conceal flawed and plain surfaces in a more decorative way. They are about dignity, integrity and keeping a seductive, elegant and glamorous home even when things are just falling apart slightly, because Abantu bazothini?” Her work tenderly addresses the transference of societal projections on paper.

    Cheriese Dilrajh also engages the domestic sphere in her work. “A space can feel foreign to you even if it is your home. It can make you question your existence.” Her installation of suspended sarees adorned with paper plants and a video projection of “alien plants of the Internet” challenges tradition and the notion of inherited culture. “People can be thought of as plants. There are indigenous and alien, each determined which is which by the space it is allowed to flourish and survive in. Plants are interesting to me as they sometimes appear to embody human characteristics. My grandmother would also often transfer plants from her house to our garden.” Her interests extend into decolonising the self  – “postcolonial is not only a theory, it is lived and embodied. It is everywhere, and identity becomes distorted and confusing, informing our growth.”

    Installation piece by Cheriese Dilrajh

    Dominique Watson‘s haunting bed installation is a response to a project created by the SADF during apartheid at the time of the Border Wars. Conscripts classified as homosexual or ‘deviant’ were sent to Ward 22 of the Military Hospital in Voortrekkerhoogte. In this ward they were subject to the ‘conversion’ procedures of electroshock therapy and chemical castration. Dominique discovered documentation of these atrocities in GALA‘s archive – including accounts from patients as well as their families. She describes this, “history as a haunting” whereby the medical gaze approached the queer body as one riddled with disease. The red bedsheet bound around the military-style cot has been stained with institutional ink – signifying the oppressive nature of the establishment.

    For his provocative work, Oratile Konopi collaborated with Hip-hop artist Gyre. Oratile’s piece is a visual response to the musician’s single entitled Eat My Ass. “We went about creating an artwork with its own narrative. The narrative of a dinner date in which you would get to know someone, going through two courses but the desert not being eaten rather alluding to the idea that something else is being ‘eaten’.” Oratile explores notions of masculinities central to the identity of black men in his artistic practice – often employing music as a device to create a point of accessibility. The installation offers an opportunity for the audience to engage with the works in a tangible form – adding to what would otherwise be limited to digital interface. Oratile and Gyre use this platform to, “speak on the issues related to gender and sexualities present in the music sonically and extending it visually. We chose the LP format because it speaks to a different moment in time. Complicating the idea that multiple sexualities are something only present in the contemporary moment and did not exist in the past.”

    Installation piece by Dominique Watson

    Framing- white- female- emerging artist- my eyes- camera- images- physical collage- print- in my mind- digital- photoshop- film strips- chance- abstract- representational- titles- When You Swipe Your ABSA Card- overlapping- labour- different people’s labours- my labour- making sense of my surroundings. Sarah-Jayde Hunkin locates herself within the city. Her processed-based work is centred around the transference of images and collaging experience. Frustrated with the lack of female representation in linocut printmaking, Sarah-Jayde is interested in the perception of ‘aggressive’ mark-making. Her print combines techniques of visualising negative space as well as delicate and fine marks.

    Kira De Cavalho‘s MAPPING SPACES articulates locations topographically. The combination of paint and chalk is used to mark a fabric surface. The suspended map spans. “between my childhood homes (Mulbarton, Rosettenville and Kensington). The graphic threaded floor plans overlay the map and symbolise personal dynamics within my living spaces. These dynamics and associated traumas are expressed through different coloured cotton thread and linear layout.”

    ‘MAPPING SPACES’ by Kira De Cavalho

    Nishay Phenkoo‘s Matrimonium study after The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even engages with its implicit Duchampian reference and the union of personified forms. “The deep enveloping gaze of the easels consumed within each other offers insight to the complexities of the marriage, its off-white veil of dust elegantly poised atop the head of its recipient awaiting a hopeful life of bliss and happiness.” Hymn Die Irae by Polish composer Zbigniew Preisner reverberates through the space while, “The recipients deeply intoxicated by the other lost in a subliminal bondage under the warm pink light imbued with parallelisms to the hand of god.”

    This year’s winner, Kundai Moyo, explores issues of consent within the photographic practice. “I became curious about scale and the illusion of intimacy and that often lends itself to things that are small enough to fit in the palm of our hands, the psychological effects of this attachment and whether or not presenting something on such a small scale diminishes some of the problematic notions attached to it.” Her sculptural works entitled, Photo Albums: Vol. I & II are two tiny velvet-covered hand-bound books each containing a photographic series captured in Mozambique last year. Many of the images feature the human subject going about the doldrums of daily life. After producing the series, Kundai contemplated the moral dilemma of exploiting the image of strangers and the inequal power dynamic inherent in photography. She decided to, “construct a mechanism that would allow for viewers to peer into the lives of these strangers in a way that did not leave them exposed to the essentialist scrutiny that often comes with the unanimous viewing by a large audience.” Her photo albums attempt to create a tender moment of intimacy in the interactive piece.

    The exhibition runs until the 7th of August.

    ‘Photo Albums: Vol. I & II’ by Kundai Moyo
    Artwork by Oratile Konopi and Gyre
    Artwork by Sarah-Jayde Hunkin
  • KutalaChopeto // Home is not a place anymore – reimagining histories of belonging

    KutalaChopeto // Home is not a place anymore – reimagining histories of belonging

    KutalaChopeto‘s exhibition opened at The Point of Order on World Refugee Day. Teresa Firmino and Esenje Helena Uambembe are an art duo who work collaboratively under the name KutalaChopeto. Their collective practice began in 2016. For this latest project, they focused their research on different communities based predominantly in the North West and Gauteng province – reconsidering stories of seemingly forgotten and disenfranchised communities. KutalaChopto collaborated with curator Maren Mia du Plessis, visual artists Loyiso Mzamane and Setumo-Thebe Mohlomi and Christiano Selmo Uambembe.

    Born from the rupture of the Angolan Civil War and the perceived ‘threat’ of communism, the South African Apartheid government sought to recruit and re-train a select group of FNLA (National Liberation Front of Angola) troops. The secret division were known as the 32 battalion or “the terrible ones”- most South Africans were unaware of its existence until it was disbanded in 1993. Many of these men were already married or from refugee camps. Those who were unmarried were encouraged to wed Angolan womxn in order to produce more soldiers. Teresa described how, “the system itself was violent, so it continued to produce violent bodies.”

    The soldiers were promised land in exchange for fighting alongside the South African government and therefore were relocated between 1988-91 to Pomfret in the North West. The desert town has become increasingly abandoned – utilities have been systematically shut down by the government as a means to vacate the town under the guise of a safety breach from asbestos poisoning.

    KutalaChopeto’s project is centred around the community itself, specifically the womxn whose voices have been historically silenced. The collective was interested in how they ended up in the camp as well as their experiences with living with men who have undergone war and tragedy. The legacy of that trauma appeared to manifest through the normalisation of violence within the larger community. The duo sought to collect histories and translate them visually. Their chosen mode of rewriting or reconstructing history extends beyond documenting the past and interrogates historically held narratives – through a deconstruction and reengagement of fragmented stories previously neglected. KutalaChopeto locate this narrative within an intra-continental perspective between Namibia, Angola and the Border Wars during the height of Apartheid and also examine what remains. “Home is not a place anymore. It becomes the people you are with.”

  • Kyra Papé – Between Seduction and Sickness

    Bulbous and sickly-looking forms installed at The Point of Order during the Situation exhibition in 2016 both enticed and disgusted viewers. Having encountered the work of emerging artist, Kyra Papé for a while within the Joburg art scene, I decided it was time to have a chat and try to get a deeper understanding of a studio process which puts her as the artist at  a rather serious health risk.

    Could you elaborate on your use of sugar as a material/medium that fuels your practice?

    My initial engagement with sugar was a rather intuitive response while making. I was busy making a sculpture in the kitchen, using a blowtorch, and I decided to grab the pot of sugar. It has been a part of my process since. Its complexity in meaning in my practice however has developed considerably over the years.  Sugar, as a material, embodies a deeply personal and vulnerable corporeal relationship that I have with food. At the root of it all I have an extremely sensitive body with numerous allergies and intolerances. My very first allergy was and remains to this day, lactose, the sugar found in milk. Over the years, my body’s increasingly become more vulnerable to other materials, namely: sugar – (Lactose, fructose and sucrose), dairy, gluten and sulphonamides. Sugar abjects me, my relationship with it is violent and aggressive yet, I am obsessed with it. I am fascinated by it as a material in all its facets and continuously explore its alien existence with my body on a daily basis.

    ‘ISL01’ 2017 by Kyra Papé

    As an artist working with sugar, once the work has been made and is exhibited outside of yourself, what sort of contexts are you placing the works in and what sort of titles are given to them? I’m trying to get an understanding of what sort of inroads you give to a viewer to understand your work within the broader context of culture and society, apart from the particular narrative you have personally with sugar?

    The main inroad I use is through installation and the relation of the works physically to the viewer.  I allow the viewer to touch my sculptures. I find their disturbance of the clean white spaces quite intriguing. As my sculptures are messy and sticky, often an unwanted aspect in a gallery space, I find them to be absorbing of people’s need to touch in a ‘no touching’ space. The sensorial aspect of the sugar in my odd creations invites the viewer into the space of the work however remains repulsive to them simultaneously. The viewer’s own embodiment prompts a push and pull with the forms through the uncanny relation between themselves and the forms.

    To be a ‘child’ again, desperate to touch this ‘thing’ that you are told you are not allowed to but are now actually allowed to, draws me in as a maker into understanding the role of material. While the works are rooted in a complex personal embodiment, sugar is a material understood cross-culturally to carry meaning in varied contexts, although I never overtly state that the works are sugar, it is always in the labelling of the works. Essentially I am through my own personal avenue of exploration, inviting the viewer to experience and explore the complexity of sugar, nevertheless it is their individual experiences of the sculptures and prints that carry the most nuanced meaning for me.

    ‘Untitled (Conversation)’ 2016 by Kyra Papé

    What has your research component in your Master’s focused on and how has that had an impact on your studio practice? 

    My masters focuses on material in relation to sculpture and printmaking. I am engaging with the validity of the use of an autobiographical and auto-ethnographical approach as a means of research through the production of a creative body of work. I am also exploring the role of the material, the object and the thing, and how their existences challenge boundaries. I have situated my focus on the process of making less. It is vital for me that the sugars impermanence leaves the sculptures in states of flux, never really being complete. The research component of my work has challenged me to be more critical of my own presence in the making and to claim the personal as a necessary avenue in why I do what I do. Vulnerability is not so easily faced and the theoretical process in relation to the work has allowed me as a maker to explore on a deeper level the nuances of my making.

    What do you see the relationship between drawing and sculpture to be in your own practice and what sort of role do your drawings have?

    The drawings are a fairly new exploration in my practice and I am still engaging with their role in terms of my sculptures. Practically, they are exploring further the behaviour of ink and sugar when the boundaries are disturbed that I have been engaging with. The main pull for me at the moment however is the alien-like quality of the forms. I am intrigued by how their delicacy invites the viewer intimately into the drawing, yet maintains a peculiarity.

  • Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas

    Flashing lights and flickering TV screens. Smells of fried eggs, alcohol and fishfloated around the silver-wrapped gallery space. The exhibition space became a kaleidoscope, creating an overwhelming visual and sensory experience that enveloped the viewer, distorting time.

    Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas is the culmination of an intensive Masters of Fine Arts program by Daniella Dagnin. The exhibition and the performances which opened on the evening of the 27th of May were only the tip of the ice-berg though, the visual element of this show is based on a novel written in the format of Interactive PDF. The interactive PDF is comprised of videos, sounds and GIFS. The novel acts as a script or lens through which the visual component is experienced. This approach is rather exciting in the way that it presents new possibilities for engaging academic requirements in a form that is true to one’s artistic concept.

    Entering into The Point of Order we were redirected down a small corridor on the side of the space only to re-emerge on the opposite side from the entrance. This simple detour changed our perception of the space and the ways in which we were no forced to engage with it. Scattered throughout the space and suspended in mid-air, we were confronted with white picket fences, Barbie dolls clamped in a boerewors braai grid. Small TV monitors played repeated footage of donkeys braying, ocean views or the Rhodes statue being removed. And projections on the walls created vignettes into scenes and scenarios unfolding in some past which affected the obscure present. As Daniella wrote in her interactive PDF, Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas is centered in a dichotomous South African landscape; a landscape situated between both ocean and casinos, dry fynbos and television sets, the interconnected green lagoons and strip clubs.”

    Intensely curated and consistent in a particularly grungy aesthetic from the moment you set foot in the exhibition space, The Point of Order, there were a number of elements intended to antagonise. We are surrounded by broken bottles smashed on the floor, a hanging inflatable sex doll, a rocking horse from the afterlife and performances of characters descaling raw fish and choking on mussels. Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas uses an amalgamation of characters, both real and fictional, to further obscure the lines between reality and fiction. Despite the overwhelming visual and sensory elements, there was a sense of vulnerability and sensitivity that permeated the narrative. A projected video of a wind-spun washing line flashed a portrait of a white police officer before our eyes. Speaking casually with one of the other viewers, he mentioned to me that the photograph was of his uncle, who had passed away a number of years prior in an “alleged” suicide, alleged due to the fact that he was left handed and the weapon was found in his right. Reality and fiction were being blurred before our eyes.

    What became interesting for me was the feeling that I myself was being sucked into this narrative, along with the other viewers of the exhibition. Having spent far longer in the exhibition that I do at most openings, a lull in the conversation being had in a group caused one girl to say, “Maybe the joke’s on us and we’re the artwork.” Perhaps the childhood rocking horse was just a donkey after all.

    Performed by:

    Koos Van der Wat AKA “Frank”

    Natasha Brown AKA “X”

    Jessica Robinson AKA “Micaiah”

    Solomzi Moleketi AKA “Tigger”

    Jennifer Winterburn AKA Busty Barmaid

    Magician: Neil Harris

    Disco Ball: Alison Martin

    Make-up Artist: Erin Bothma

    Photographer: Marcia Elizabeth

     

  • NEWWORK 16 Gradshow: dismantling exhibition space

    In conversation with Reshma Chhiba, the exhibitions coordinator at the student-run space The Point of Order, she mentioned the above quote as a question that has often been addressed by the final year fine art students at the Wits School of Arts. NEWWORK is the graduate show and has been running for 6 years. “The idea of Newwork is that it’s one of those open platforms where one is able to do anything really in relation to the notion of exhibitions. For now it has been pretty standard. We’ve always had the use of the WAM [Wits Art Museum] basement as the space that one shows in and then over the years people have decided to use their studio spaces or other spaces just as an add on to what they have done previously. So essentially WAM’s basement would be used to house one single work by every single student from the graduating class,” explained Reshma. This year, given Fees Must Fall, the gradshow was about looking at the project of the decolonial and thinking about how we engage spaces that are seen to be traditional spaces for seeing and displaying art. The students chose to display their work at  multiple spaces in the city including The Point of Order, Wits School of Arts, Wits Art House, the Art House Windows, Solomon Mahlangu House, Anstey’s studios and Nothing Gets Organized. WAM was not used as a space to display work but rather used as a space to play a documentary video of each artist contextualizing their work, and later in the week, recordings of the three openings that took place from the 1st to 3rd of December were played.

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    Their entire gradshow from the 1st to the 8th of December tries to dismantle the traditional idea of a gradshow through de-centralizing where works were displayed and performed. “A Gradshow is about a celebration, so in crossing out the word Gradshow, it really became about a non-Gradshow, but a moment to show their work and to think about how to engage with space differently,” explained Reshma. This crossing out of the word gradshow can be seen on the catalogue they put together collectively. In setting up a new kind of gradshow and this crossing out spoke to tensions on campus and the discomfort and uncertainty around having a gradshow considering the student protests and violence through state-sanctioned police on campus, as well as directly engaging with ideas around decolonization. Through displaying and performing their work at multiple venues, including spaces not thought of as exhibition spaces, they were asking questions about how art should be looked at and enacting a form of decolonization of exhibitionary practice. The exclusion of captions or rationales pasted next to each work, the displaying of works outside of the Wits Art Museum, performances taking place on the street, and video works being played outside the Art House walls demonstrate their conscious interrogation of how a gradshow is understood to be put together.

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    Each student has been working through specific themes throughout the year, and so each space activated by the gradshow provides a different experience for viewers. Themes such as cleansing, anxiety, Coloured identity, institutionalized whiteness, erasure, anxiety, the archive, the Black body as well as space are explored by the artists on display.

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    While each artist has been working on specific themes within their individual artistic practice, they worked collaboratively on a catalogue. Breaking away from the traditional layout of a catalogue where each artist is assigned a page which displays their name, work and artist statement, this catalogue comes across as an extension of their works as well as a collective artwork in itself. This refusal to create a slick, glossy catalogue was also a reflection of what has been happening at Wits and visually presenting a sense of urgency we find ourselves in. An exercise book was layered with quotes, sketches, research materials and images of works mixed together and then photographed. The end result being a book which is a photograph of a book. This catalogue is presented as a combined visual diary of their research processes as well as invoking the question around education through the use of an exercise book.

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    Featured artists:

    Alexander Appolis ,Gemma Siobhan Hart, Maren Mia Du Plessis, CandiceTaljaard, Yaeli-Mia Bartels, Vivien van Teijlingen, Colleen Greeff, Amber. C. Wessels, Lemishka Moodley, Jessica Janse Van Rensburg, Tsepiso Lekganyane, Nadia Myburgh, Siyanda Marrengane, Marc-Anthony Madella, Refiloe Namise, Gabriel Hope, Tsholofelo Tshegofatso Seleke and Simone Opperman.

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