Tag: video art

  • Zohra Opoku // Threaded history

    German/Ghanaian artist living and working in Accra, Zohra Opoku captivates viewers using multiple mediums including installation, photography, sculpture and video. Her thematic investigations revolve around Ghanaian traditions, spirituality and family lineage and how they relate to self-authorship and her hybrid identity. Material culture often forms the foundation of these investigations, with textiles woven together in how these thematic investigations manifest.

    Image by Zohra Opoku from the series ‘Unraveled Threads’ 2017

    The images that she prints on fabric speak to the intimacy and history that textiles can come to contain. In her series Queenmothers 2016, the centring of female figures is a reflection on matriarchal systems and women as creators of a sense of community among people.

    Her more recent work Unraveled Threads 2017, comprised of screenprints on cotton, canvas & linen, connects to her exploration of her family lineage. Opoku did not know much about her father or her Ghanaian heritage during her childhood. In Unraveled Threads, she uses the kente cloth as a way to enhance her family history. Kente cloth varies in design, colour and pattern, each carrying stories and meaning. While the cloth is worn by different kinds of people today, it is historically associated with royalty and sacredness. It is believed that the origins of this woven cloth is that two farmers came across a spider. Amazed by the way the spider creates its web, they tried to imitate thus creating the kente design.

    “Identity is always, for me, based in textile,” Opoku explains in an interview with OkayAfrica.

    Image by Zohra Opoku from the series ‘Unraveled Threads’ 2017

    The stories and proverbs associated with each kente design makes this form of woven cloth a carrier of ethnic history. Quite fittingly, Opoku was inspired by the kente cloth that she found in her late father’s wardrobe as the canvas on which to present her father as an Asante leader, as well as to print images of herself and her siblings. Here she not only pays homage to a father she barely knew, but also embraces the significance of kente as threaded history. This allows her to engage with her Ghanaian roots as well as her familial history. She explores her experiences growing up in the West, and what it means to confront blackness and Africa as an artist later in her life.

    Image by Zohra Opoku from the series ‘Unraveled Threads’ 2017
  • Euridice Kala AKA Zaituna Kala // Sea (E)Scapes from the Shores of Slavery

    The freedom of all is essential to my freedom

    -Mikhail Bakunin

    The tide of migration; sweeping through coastlines. A personal history of inter-continental travel. Memory washed up on a receding shore. Rock pools bubble to the brim, swirling shades of deep aqua and teal. Bleached pigment fades into the edges of a Polaroid. A snapshot of histories.

    “I come from a place of physical fights, death and violence. Until as recently as last year, Mozambique was at war, people do not seem to be afraid of death as we express with this kind of violence, and we heal and manifest physically our grievances.” Maputo born artist, Euridice Kala AKA Zaituna Kala, responds to a context of violence in her work. “I am as part of that history as anyone is for my life is part bi-product of it…The only thing is to find ways to heal and reconcile –Africans in general have been associated with this healing nature, if you look at works of many of us (African Artists and Diaspora) we are trying to close gaps where it seems we were passive agents.”

    She describes her practice as a “space of self discovery.” Her conceptual process is also one of fluidity, “there needs to be a constant critical screening of personal and collective beliefs, as we move and change as human beings”.  “My work is not another sharp knife stabbing the same people who are used to being stabbed and continue as living corpses. My work is in fact the opposite, to hold the urge to stab and use this in-between to resolve some questions.”

    Kala has been involved with the project, Sea (E)Scapes, for the last three years. The project traces the route of the Sao Jose Paquete d’Africa that in 1794 was ship wrecked off the coast of Cape Town. About half of the slaves aboard tragically drowned.  “This is a parallel project between artistic and research process. I’ve been in Lisbon, in Ilha de Moçambique, in Cape Town and other related places.” The project thus far has culminated in performances, photographs, video pieces, and texts.

    “I have concerns…concerns that only through expression in art I see an appeasing of my questions. I am not a conceptual artist, I am a visual agent in the art world and my responsibility is to be as descriptive as possible when I present my ideas to the limited and sometimes repressive world of art and hope for the best.”

    Video Still from Sea (E)scapes, 2016
  • [wo]mannequin // a multimedia exhibition and social experiment

    I interviewed artist Robyn Perros about her work [wo]mannequin on show at the new experimental gallery space The Other Room in Durban.

    The exhibition includes two videos titled @Herr1234 and Don’t Look. In @Herr1234 we are introduced to the character Herr through the documentation of an experimental performance of the mute mannequin walking through Durban’s CBD as it tries to discover a sense of self.  This performance explores the role the camera plays in distorting reality, our obsession with the body, self-promotion and gender identity as a performance. Don’t Look explores the ‘everyday’ perversions of society and the erotic feelings affirmed in image making. The participatory installation Worn sees used mannequins displayed on a wall. Audiences were invited to share comments, thoughts and drawings on these plastic bodies. The exhibition also includes photographic images mostly shot in analogue. In our interview Robyn expands on her work and the experimental elements in this exhibition.

    Tell our readers about you and your art practice

    When I moved to Durban in 2014, I spent most of my free time exploring the city in solitude. My weekends were spent walking, observing, listening (basically loitering). I suppose my ‘art’ developed out of this exploration. I told my friend, fellow artist and street photographer, Samora Chapman, about the places I was going. He said: “Fuck! You should be shooting!” He gave me his Dad’s old camera and I started making pictures.

    I was into video during university, but had never explored photography much at all. Later I was given an old Pentax analogue camera from my step-father. I began experimenting with film and have never turned back. I love photographing inanimate objects, spaces in between and what it means to be human. My interest in participatory methods, anthroposophy, dreams also inform my art practice. Some of my influences: Nan Goldin, Martin Parr, Susan Sontag, Herman Hesse, Roald Dahl – but mostly my creative circle of friends.

    (I never studied art or photography. My academic background is in Journalism and Ethnomusicology. But I have been working as a writer, photojournalist, and online editor in Durban for the past two years. I’m now freelancing / hustling for any form of income before I head to Sweden to live in my sister’s basement, work, study and join a bobsled team 😉

    You describe [wo]mannequin as an “exhibition and experiment”. This is interesting. Would you like to elaborate on this?

    I describe it as an exhibition for obvious reasons: I am displaying a set of physical works which people can come to a physical space and engage with. However my interest truly lies in public art, participation and process. So there are elements of this exhibition which are social experiments. These being two public performances (one done in the Durban CBD and one on the opening night of the exhibition by Herr) as well as a participatory installation, which is still growing.

    One undertakes an experiment in order to make some sort of discovery. So what happens when you take a live walking mannequin and let it loose on the streets? What happens when you put it in a gallery space? Same object. Different context. Contrasting (yet some similar) outcomes. Any art conducted in the public space, is an experiment. Because ‘the other’ is any person or thing that is not me. Therefore, we can make assumptions, but can never really know how people are going to react. This is the magic.

    I have been monitoring these reactions to Herr’s performances and the participatory installation in order to better understand my own art practice and ‘the other’. But of course, experiments rely on a repeatable procedure. And this is one which is ongoing with no fixed conclusions (or lab rats).

    You also describe [wo]mannequin as a “continuing exploration and confrontation of the role my own political body, and the bodies of others, play within the carcass of South African society today”. Would you like to elaborate on this, specifically on confronting the role of your own political body and South African society as a carcass.

    We are constantly watching ourselves. Yet isn’t it strange that we can never truly see our physical selves? That we are always looking at ourselves through some form of reflection – a mirror, a window, a photographic image, a screen. We have a physical body – it’s made up of the most intricate organs, oxygen, water, cells, DNA, etc. But of course we have a political body too. Where skin is not just cells. Where language is not just sound. Where clothes are not just fibers. Where the places we occupy are not just geography. What these signify to others, is political. It is this body that is socially controlled. It is this body we fixate on. And attempting to understand it, stripping it down and confronting it is important to me in order to build a more honest relationship with myself. And all humans, humanoids and living creatures alike.

    Death is a huge theme in my work and I say carcass not to be gruesome, sensational or insensitive, but because death, as painful as it is, is a positive thing and it is not always physical. Old ideas need to die before new ones emerge. Death means life. But nothing truly dies anyway does it? Things just reform, take new shape. I think South Africa and the world is in an exciting reforming process. Despite my seemingly bleak subject matter of plastic people – I feel incredibly positive about the future of the country, the continent, the world, humanity et al.

    You also see the mannequin as occupying the space between life and death, commodity and body, destruction and reconstruction of humanity and of self. Elaborate on the significance of this. I am particularly interested in the body/commodity dichotomy.

    These are loaded concepts to unpack and “there are no short answers, not if you really want to know” (Paul Myburgh) 😉 But I think I touched the surface of what I mean about life and death / destruction and reconstruction in the question above. So I’ll try to focus on the body / commodity theme here. The perhaps more obvious themes this work unpacks is the use of the body, particularly the women’s body, to sell. Encouraging objectification and consumerism to which the woman / womxn often falls victim to.

    I placed big neon pink FOR SALE // ON SPECIAL signs below all of my exhibition photographs. I don’t want to hide the fact that art is money. And I often wonder why art should be elevated from the perceived ‘low art’ of something like window dressing (the home of the mannequin). Mannequins are these silent salespeople, objects to play with, aspire to, to dress and undress. As a women, our bodies are constantly under question and scrutiny. As an artist today, we have had to become self-promotors – using our bodies to carry out and essentially sell our ideas, products and performances. If the work is a part of us, are we not selling ourselves? Meh, capitalism.

    You also state that “this self-reflective multimedia exhibition essentially explores the remoteness of the real”. Would you like to elaborate on what you mean by this?

    Looking at an event, or a person’s life, in photographed form has become more and more equivalent to participating in it. This obsession with documenting and preserving reality through photographs has, in one sense, doomed us. Distancing us from reality, it has inhibited us from engaging wholly in the world. Of course, the camera grants us access and assists us in seeing the world more acutely in another sense, I am not denying its importance and value. But is this concept of disconnect I am interrogating at the moment. How images can often simplify the chaos of lived experience. That is their beauty and their curse.

    Mannequins themselves omit the real… nipples, pubic hair, bumps, pregnancy, varicose veins. (Where they at!?) Not to mention the predominant white plastic they are made of, what that omits and how problematic that in itself is in reflecting “reality”! Colonialism // whitewashing.

    I often feel like these plastic dolls. Staring out through the glass of privilege, the cage of physicality ­- watching life happen around me, unable to partake in it, to run with it. It is this yearning for slowing down, for real human encounters, real human connection that moves me. In a sense, the mannequins were the best portraits of humans I could capture without pointing a camera at others. The best self-portraits I could capture without pointing a camera at myself. In a world governed by material objects, it would seem appropriate to express humanity through them.

    Would you like to say something specific about Herr and this character featuring in the video @Herr1234?

    The concept of Herr developed from the often unwanted attention my solitude gets in the city. The place of my political body in the city is often suspected and questioned. I have often been followed, asked if I am a prostitute, homeless, a Whoonga addict, a preacher of the gospel, or just a lost German tourist. To which I usually just reply, “No. I am just walking.” From a young age, women in particular are taught to guard their bodies, to not get hurt, to watch rather than participate. This I think is learned behaviour and of course yes, we must protect ourselves and others, but I often think this fear of physical harm holds women back more than it should.

    My presence is often perplexing in places that are “not safe for a woman” and I developed this character, Herr, who is supposed to be a living mannequin in order to amplify this solitude into hyper-solitude. By drawing attention to my vulnerability and using it as a source of power. She owns the space in which I would ordinarily be trying to blend into or hide behind, using the camera.

    The character, Herr, simultaneously developed from my ‘uneasiness’ with self-promotion as an artist. From the persona I project online via social media and the pressure that arises from that. I use Herr to explore societies ‘uneasiness’ with blurred gender lines // gender as performance // subject as object // self-promotion // and the limitations of the body in complex public spaces. She is a developing character / public performer and we have big plans.

    Are there any specific artworks or moments at the exhibition opening you would like to mention?

    On the opening night Herr was sitting alone in the centre of the room on a plastic chair. Mute, still, watching its own reflection and the activity of those in the space via a set of mirrors. Here, Herr was the spectacle of its own exhibition. Yet it was an object without agency. Internalizing the gaze of ‘the other’.

    It was interesting for me to witness the performance of socializing happening around me without having to participate in it. This is often what the camera in itself does – it magnetizes attention. Yet at the same time – confirms alienation. It is this border I am constantly on the verge on in my own personal life. The border between participant and observer. Awake and sleep.

    Artists themselves are often so self-conscious and self-aware. And in this way I was able to experience my own work more intimately by being a character within it. I would have felt like a mannequin anyway at my own exhibition, so in a sense I was revealing this vulnerability of the artist. The idea of concealing myself in order to reveal myself.

    To witness how people altered their behavior and became conscious of their own physical bodies knowing there was a presence in the room, watching them, like a camera, was also an interesting dynamic. Mostly, people in the space spoke about themselves – what they looked like, what they felt, what their experiences were – rather than the work and the obvious presence in the room. Narcissism – another big theme.

    Here, I was inviting people to look at me, to touch me, to engage with me / Herr. But this didn’t really happen in the gallery room. But it happened on the streets. Therefore, the gallery is the safest and most dangerous place for art, isn’t it?

    Would you like to say something about showing this work at The Other Room Durban?

    The Other Room is a space for artists / thinkers / creators / whoever to explore new work, test ideas, throw something out there. It is so necessary for a space like this to exist and I am so proud and priveleged to have shared my work there. [Wo]mannequin is the third experiment / exhibition to be held at The Other Room, ahead of the brilliant minds of Donovan Orr and Doung Anwar Jahangeer.

    The Other Room is the baby of Matthew Ovendale, a phenomenal artist, mind and dear friend. I did not study art or photography, but I have tons of projects and ideas I’m exploring all the time. Matt knew I had been photographing mannequins and invited me to share some of my work. My exhibition grew and changed over the course of a month and Matt assisted me throughout the whole process. We explored new mediums together, such as working with chemical plastics to make an actual plastic mold and mask of my own face. He was as excited about the project, as if it were his own.

    I probably would never have gotten around to sharing and delving into this work the way I did without the space and support. The Other Room such a kif spot for people to get together, share, talk and engage with one another’s work. A step in the right direction. I was able to collaborate with so many incredible people on this project because of it and I can’t thank them enough.

    To check out more of Robyn’s work visit her Tumblr.

  • Simunye Summit 2010- The Futuristic Past

    Bogosi Sekhukhuni is an artist whose previous work has explored the creeping dominance of the virtual over daily life.  Projects such as Consciousness engine 2: absentblackfatherbot, a simulation of a conversation between a father and son, echo classic science fiction themes of artificial intelligence and post-humanism. He is actively conversant with these genre tropes- “I  approach science fiction as a narrative style. And  as a way of developing hypotheses, imagined  environments or simulations of circumstances that speak to various conditions of human nature, usually specifically within the lens of a black body in a pre singularity world”. But, he is equally aware of these tropes limitations , saying “ I’m really not interested in the future in the sci fi sense; science fiction or discussions on technological progress tend to be projected through a western capitalist linear vision that anticipates and packages novelty. I’m more drawn to Bantu philosophical interpretations of space time that acknowledge a cyclical nature of time and in turn, the history of human progress.  Our present popular understanding of technological progress is supported by the notion that our time represents an unprecedented height of human intelligence, which is easily refuted by the immense archeological record left all over the world, especially in southern Africa”.

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    His current solo exhibition Simunye Summit 2010, reverses engineers the past, with a “  a sci fi dystopian reading of Apartheid history and society”. The show presents “ the brand of Simunye Systems; a fictional biotech and genetics research company who offer insurance plans that include treatments that focus on genetic markers responsible for various human ailments. I’ve modelled the nature of Simunye Systems on front biochem companies formed by apartheid military intelligence that were developing experimental chemical warfare directed at the Black population in the 80’s. Its a fascinating part of our history that needs more light shed on it”.

    The visual components of the exhibition come with a written backstory, which imagines an alternate reality South Africa, complete with cosmic messages and transformative genetic technology.

    The real life history inspiring the show is wild in its own right. Throughout the 1970’s and 1980’s the Apartheid government embarked on various deranged weapons programs, from attempts to weaponize MDMA to a secret nuclear bomb test in the Atlantic Ocean, referred to by historians as the Vela Incident. Although much of this history has been forgotten, it has had a strange half life in science fiction film. The 1987 classic Robocop begins with a news story about a South African made neutron bomb. The Vela Incident is alluded to in the ultra- tacky Alien Vs. Predator (2004). While these are just stray references, Sekhukhuni is confronting the nightmares of the past head on, generating visual fictions for our disturbed present.

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  • Boda Boda Lounge Project – Defying Inter-Continental Boundaries through Digital Pixels

    A historical Imperialism, articulated through invasion and occupation. A systematic division spawned from the imaginations of white men to conquer for capital gains. A continent sliced up by the butcher’s knife of colonialism. Corners of conflict, fictioned intersections amputated and dislocated. A coloniality that runs through the semi-visible veins of demarcated territory. The divide between here and there.

    Border 

    [bawr-der]

    noun

    1.the part or edge of a surface or area that forms its outer boundary.

    2.the line that separates

    6.brink; verge.

    The phonetic Boda Boda Lounge Project emerged two years ago, as an intercontinental visual engagement that began to explore the notion of physical and conceptual mobility between spatially divided land. Fifteen different art organizations hosted the event across Africa this year. The project took place during the weekend of 18th-20th of November. Simnikiwe Buhlungu was one of the participating artists peppered across the continent.

    Simnikiwe exhibited a video piece entitled System to Dekakanise – she describes the piece as an exploration into “the complicated existence of languages in a socio-historical and cultural context in South Africa through the use of drawing and what I call Broken Inglish as a way of navigating various spaces.” The piece is an interesting and nuanced critique – articulating the legacy of assimilated English that stemmed from colonial rule and seeps into the contemporary moment.

    Boda Boda transcends borders through its, “cross-continental approach. The fact that the videos are simultaneously screened in various African countries which have different, but similar, socio-political climates and histories. While the videos may engage in the same framework (of the project), they are all equally different and tell stories from different perspectives.” Through this mode of representation, the project avoided singular narratives.

    The young artist perceived the conceptual crux of the project as, “Engaging with the spaces by which the artists are surrounded. Negotiating issues that exists both in the centre and on the periphery. Probing socio-political, cultural and historical thought with issues that are (un)discussed on the African continent. Doing so through the medium of video, which has its own history and existence in Africa. Something that is still somewhat of [an] overlooked medium in some respects, but also a medium that can be transferred to daily experiences do to its versatility as a technology. So finding a meeting point between these engagements and the medium of video.”

    Her engagement with other artists was heavily facilitated by digital media, “the engagement is not necessarily a physical one. It’s a virtual engagement, an (un)spoken engagement, it’s also a visual engagement when you see the other artists’ videos for the first time whether you are aware of their respective practices or not.” In this way work becomes a lens and proxy for physical interactions.

    Conceptual links that spanned the continent were notions of, “transgenerational conflicts, trauma, [un]written histories, bodies and what these bodies endure, navigating new and old spaces, language[s], socio-politics, economies of various kinds, colonial(ities) urgency and artistic response to these urgencies.”

    Atef Berredjem (Algeria)

    Awuor Onyango (Kenya)

    Boitumelo Motau (South Africa)

    Cameron Platter (South Africa)

    Christopher Wessels (South Africa)

    Ezra Wube (Ethiopia)

    Francois Knoetze (South Africa)

    Bofa Da Cara

    Gustave Fundi Mwamba (DRC)

    Jere Ikongio (Nigeria)

    Junior Nyembwe (DRC)

    Kutala Chopeto (South Africa)

    Lydia Ourahmane (Algeria)

    Maurice Mbikayi (DRC)

    Mulugeta Gebrekidan (Ethiopia)

    Ngassam Tchatchoua Yvon Léolein (Cameroon)

    Ntathu Mandisa Gumbi (South Africa)

    Ori Huchi Kozia (Congo Brazzaville)

    Paulo Azevedo (Angola)

    Simnikiwe Buhlungu (South Africa)

    Simohammed Fettaka (Morocco)

    Sisipho Mase (South Africa)

    Sofiane Zouggar (Algeria)

    Teboho Gilbert Letele (South Africa)

    Ubulungiswa Justice Collaboration (South Africa)

    Vincent Bezuidenhout & Nobushinge Kono (South Africa & Japan)

    Salooni (Uganda)

    Wiame Haddad (Morocco/ Tunisia)

  • Watch Daniel Haaksman featuring Spoek Mathambo in Akabongi, an inner city intersection of art, internet and hustle

    Art and technology have this shared power to transcend their original context, creating new contexts, and new worlds within which they can be used and understood. These elements meet in interesting ways in Daniel Haaksman and Spoek Mathambo’s new video. Shot in Johannesburg, it reflects the city’s hustle and innovations, its creativity and its unique landscape.

    ‘Akabongi’ samples the legendary Soul Brothers and this video vivifies the sometime thankless, sometime thrilling grind of hustling and working in the CBD. The grind is the reason people break through and push passion; humans always find innovative ways to connect and create in unconventional spaces. The video references the CUSS Group’s work in the fusion of art and technology and CUSS’ use of urban spaces as outposts for exhibiting art, highlighting the ‘artistic value of hybrid cultural production’ and revealing that art can be anywhere, and enjoyed by anyone, even if it’s streaming out of a PC screen in the bustle of downtown Jozi. Perhaps especially then, as the digital age continues to reveal and unravel what art means, where it can be found and what it can do.

    While the CBD may appear a gritty clog in the machine, it is buzzing with creativity and possibility in its various corners, The Scorpion’s pantsula dancing is far from out of place on the streets of the city, it’s another hustle here. People get incredibly creative, using culture and creativity as instruments of expression and economic survival.  And pantsula is an art form so particular to Southern Africa’s culture and circumstance.

    Sampling the Soul Brother’s and Mada ‘the Scorpion’ dancing pantsula all contribute to a colourful cultural expression of southern african urbanity. The video was directed by Chris Kets and it’s crew is a roll call of urban brilliance; TakeZito produced the video and Jody Brand played Creative Director, her incredible images from the shoot offer a background into the scenes and faces that give this city its originality and humanity.

    The fusion of 90’s Kevin Smith tropes meeting a work day in inner city Jozi is such fun especially when Spoek Mathambo and Mada are the homies hustling at the internet cafe. Enjoy Akabongi below, its brilliant and so refreshing.

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