Tag: Tony Gum

  •  Anaka– The Healing Energies of Creative Expression

     Anaka– The Healing Energies of Creative Expression

    Anaka is a creative with a magnetic portfolio and project repertoire to her name. The visual impression of her work is one of sublime distinctiveness. In her photographic world, off-centeredness reigns, non-traditional cropping (such as the metaphorical decapitating of heads) takes prevalence, and where there seems to be a thought given to the rule of thirds – the edges of the images bleed – a clear and intentional stylistic choice.

    Other defining factors to Anaka’s photographic work are the layering of imagery as well as the selection of models that draw on one another, strengthening each image that make up her selections. Her portfolio currently features work for Refinery 29, Ossé, Tony Gum, images of Cape Town based photographer and creative director Imraan Christian as well as images of musician Luca Williams, to name a few.

    Describing herself, Anaka states on her website that “I channel through the mediums of analogue and digital photography, film direction & editing; choreography and movement meditation; collage; & archival documentation in order to contribute to the healing energies that creation brings into this realm.”

    Identifying as a healer first, she expresses that she is a dancer second and a visual artist third. Utilizing her creative virtues in order to sustain the way in which Spirit lives within the creative process. With a multitude of clients and impressive likenesses captured by her lens, Anaka continues her message of healing in other ways with projects such as the ‘Silient Zine’ –  a physical and online archive of artists and their creations within a specific moment intended towards healing.

    Looking at Spirit and healing energies it is easy to mentally create an image of Anaka practicing meditational movement – and she does – for not only personal healing but for communal healing. A dancing child grew into the healer, dancer and artist Anaka is at present. Movement is an integral part of her being. It is a source of positive energy that she pours out onto the world, into her art and into her vision.

    Anaka’s portraits of artists such as Luca Williams and Imraan Christian indicate another interest – to archive African artists and artists working within the African Diaspora. An act that reminds me of an argument made by Susan Sontag in ‘On Photography’ where she proclaims that photographing anyone makes them important and lends celebrity status onto them. She contests that every person photographed is as important as any other person photographed regardless of their social standing – to photograph someone is to monumentalize them (Sontag 1977:31).

    Anaka wishes to highlight the importance of these individuals and their creative pursuits which is accomplished by the mere fact that she created an object from their likeness (a photograph sometimes altered by intervention into a collage). This has a deeper purpose however; the archival material hopes to decolonise the meaning of being an artist within a societal system of violence and oppression against people of colour.

    As her website states “Imagery is infinite” and outlives human mortality. Imagery created by her and her collaborators are put under the ‘Imagery is Infinite™ Ar(t)chives’ title and serves to hold physical and digital space in the world. This also promotes the idea of creating consciously. The title acts as a means to “document how artists are creating now in the face of colonization”.

    Anaka’s work can thus be regarded as a practice of inner healing as well as a broader healing practice towards the community she situates herself within. Her positive energy oozes from her intervention with already documented imagery as well as the power of her future and current vision is of evident prevalence.

  • Gemma Shepherd – A Daring Fashion Lens Evoking A Sense Of Familiarity

    Gemma Shepherd – A Daring Fashion Lens Evoking A Sense Of Familiarity

    Gemma Shepherd describes herself as a twenty something year old photographer and creative from Cape Town. She is a graduate from UCT with a keen focus on fashion that takes on a narrative form on her blog, The Urban Gem.

    At present, she is learning how to express herself through a variety of art forms. She has relatively widespread creative interests that can be pinned down as fashion, makeup artistry, photography and writing. It is understandable that the twenty something year old would need a variety of outlets to quench her thirst for creative execution.

    Her photographic practice has received increasing acknowledgement as she keeps on pushing her work to further leaps and bounds. Gemma hopes that her risky behaviour and go-getter attitude will motivate and enable other creatives to risk the unknown. “It’s very seldom that I feel truly satisfied with something I produce…[but] to look back at the work I started out producing and to see that improvement, it’s encouraging,” she tells fellow blogger Rebecca Arendse in an interview earlier this year.

    Her exploration into the world of still image creation happened instinctively after she was presented with a disposable camera as a child. From there her passion for the medium grew and later evolved into combining the elements that she cares about most – fashion and portraiture. Attaining an internship at Cosmopolitan Magazine after her graduation from UCT gave her the opportunity to obtain a better understanding of the behind-the-scenes of fashion content creation. After viewing the Vogue exhibition in Madrid she came to the realization that she had what it takes to be the fashion photographer. Today Gemma’s portfolio features an editorial on Tony Gum for Roundtable, a shoot titled ‘Girls will be Girls’ recently published on A Fashion Friend, the AW17 lookbook for LAZULI as well as work produced for IMUTE Magazine.

    Her photographic narrative is held together with defining elements in her work such as the use of tight cropping, slightly saturated imagery with soft shadows, black and white images that evoke chic and a droopy romantic impression, use of photomontage and an intimacy that is her own. Gemma’s use of atypical cropping brings her viewers closer to her models, closer than a viewer gets to see a stranger in real life, adding a sense of familiarity and intimacy to her portraiture. This has to be Gemma’s most intriguing dare devil move. Defying what is considered to be acceptable framing, and her move is a welcome one.

              

    Gemma’s fervour to learn, grow and inspire translates in her imagery and documented word. Her photographic work speaks of an innate understanding of style and popular culture. Gemma is well on her way to defining a cemented means of articulating self-expression in various forms of art production. Her lens has the ability to emphasize what is natural and add a romantic overtone to her work which seduces your eyes.

     

  • Black bloggers are the conscious curators of our local internet consumption: Part 2 of Tumblr blogs to follow

    Black bloggers are the conscious curators of our local internet consumption: Part 2 of Tumblr blogs to follow

    Having found myself stumbling upon more amazing blogs from local and African curators I decided to do another chapter in Tumblr blogs to follow piece. There is so much content being made online so it’s understandable that one may feel overwhelmed by internationally made and curated content.

    Yet, online readers are now no longer just consumers. They want their content to directly reflect who they are and who they want to be. With ease of access through Internet comes a consumer who is more demanding and will no longer settle for ‘kinda’ good enough content.

    South Africans and Africans are no strangers to these trends. If they can’t find it they will make it. They are the conscious curators in our consumption. Interest should also be given to the spaces where they are able to control what they post as well as what they are able to see.

    Tumblr gives one this direct control and allows for constant inflow and of content and distribution with ease. Such spaces represent the move of black people towards controlling what they want to see in the media.

    With this push for more local we must also not shy away from the local blogs that feature Western made content and international brands. As African creators we are being influenced by a variety of sources. We cannot ignore the influence of the west both historically, socially and economically. To ignore their influence means the denial of the historical injustice and their continuation. This action causes the distortion of an African identity that is decontextualized into an exotified empty husk that functions only for Western consumption.

    The inclusion of such Western made images and brands is an understanding of the complex nature of (South) African identity. (See the Tony Gum link as an example of this process) South African bloggers are doing this as both a political act of empowerment but also as a craving for a certain aesthetic that looks like “themselves”.

    This list reflects such an understanding of how the blog medium can be used to represent and feed a constantly changing identity that does not run away from itself. This short list will function as a “starter pack” to understanding the complexity and magic that is black creative culture that can be found in their blogs.

    tumblr_o7ffuzQkEP1rgda3ko1_1280Illustration by Thandiwe Tshabalala 

    Thandiwe Tshabalala 

    Based in Cape Town, this talented designer and illustrator showcases her striking illustrative work with catching colours and loud texts. She includes her commissioned work and so much of what she posts resonates with urban city living. She features beautifully drawn portraits and some selfies of herself hard at work. This is a good site to follow featuring not only the artists own creations but get a glimpse into her ideas that fuel her as she also provides brief explanations on her submissions and writes her own short  posts.

    tony-gum-4Image via Tony Gum

    Tony Gum

    A fast rising star in the creative scene, Ms Gum is part of the local movement creating online content directed towards the South African youth. Her site features her own works that have come to characterize her style of her body (co-)operating with props quintessential to the popular culture icons of our time, such as the sneaker or coke bottle. The site also gives links to her previous projects and collaborations which are also worth taking a look at as she can be best described as “a new prism through which to view African contemporary art”.

    original_239010_eD2THLotynJ7I_Frj2Y5v8VkWImage via Balmoi Abe

    Equatorial Footprints

    This site gives us a look into the world as seen from architect and self-described ‘space curator’  Balmoi Abe. Stationed in Nairobi Kenya, he uses the site to show the beautiful scenery that he interacts with. This results in ‘everyday’ shots that should not be mistaken as just another Instagram shot. His design training comes through strongly in his photographs, with strong lines and geometric shapes, we see his architectural sensibilities coming through in his photographs. This site is definitely for the lovers of design who want to get to acquaint themselves intimately with African architectural spaces.

    tumblr_o5d3an0Nr41qkwenjo3_1280Image by Lebo Lukewarm 

    Lulama Wolf

    This beautifully themed blog is a must to follow if you want to see your news feed filled with melanin soaked bodies draped in some seriously current fashion trends. Lulama Mlambo is the creative behind this blog and also features pots of her modelling outfits and looking fly as hell. This one is definitely for those seeking style inspiration as the outfits she wears are accessible and stunning!

    tumblr_o9y1c8xm2N1qmk3ooo1_1280Image via Beautiful Boys 

    Beautiful Boys ZA

    I constantly make the big mistake of leaving out the brothers in my personal quest for local black fashion content. This site, as the name suggests, features beautiful boys ‘dressed to the T’ in swag. Featuring various men’s fashion and portraits. This is a good site to view content made from the male perspective but not one that is necessarily masculine. This site is particularly useful for those wanting to get better in touch with male fashion with its style being mostly street.

    Processed with VSCOcam with c1 preset

    Image via Umlilo

    Umlilo 

    My final choice comes from a magical being of many talents who is Cape Town based. Both an artist, performer and singer Umlilo is a persona who is making content that is pushing gender, visual and dance boundaries through the sounds of dark ‘angsty’ youth and visual opulence. The blog features images from previous performances as well as links to his music and various projects. This is a site for those looking to understand the Avant-guard performance arts but through a more accessible format of pop, dance, electronic and R n B.