Met Ander Oë - EBONY Curated
Transcription
Met Ander Oë - EBONY Curated
Met Ander Oë Larita Engelbrecht 1 September - 29 October 2016 EBONY Cape Town Larita Engelbrecht (1986 – ) Born in Bloemfontein, South Africa, in 1986, Larita Engelbrecht lives and works in Cape Town. For the past seven years, Engelbrecht has been exploring various art-making practices, most notably collage and felt-making. Ranging from a felted softsculpture skull (Memento Mori I), to a large-scale collage of over twohundred frolicking nude figures in a contemporary reference to Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights (Saturated Spectacle), Engelbrecht’s early work explores themes of excess and materiality. Since then, she has been expanding her paper-based practice to include paper sculpture (Aardskyf), as well as her own abstract drawings (Metacollage). From her collection of old books and magazines, Engelbrecht intuitively selects images for the purpose of combining disparate images into unexpected compositions. Coaxed by the surrealists of the early 20th century, these pictorial juxtapositions are, like the elements of drawing combined with it, spontaneous and automatic. The process of collecting books and magazines, are, however, more controlled and purposefully curated. Through the juxtaposition of one picture with another, Engelbrecht encourages us to rethink the significance of the original image in its new context. According to the artists, her work “challenges the viewer to question their own assumptions about culture and aesthetics”. Engelbrecht received both a BA in Fine Arts (2009) and a MA in Visual Art (2012) from the University of Stellenbosch. In 2012, Engelbrecht was invited to an artist residency programme at a new media gallery in Finland. Her work has been selected in a number of group exhibitions and art competitions in South Africa, as well as for a travelling exhibition, Making Africa: A Continent of Contemporary Design, hosted by the Vitra Design Museum in Germany. In addition to her work as a visual artist, Engelbrecht is also an art academic and is a senior lecturer at the Cape Town Creative Academy. Met Ander Oë Met Ander Oë, an Afrikaans book title on a library card, literally translates to ‘through different eyes’. By juxtaposing diverse sets of representations, the medium of collage directs the shifting of the gaze. Collage – an intuitive process of collecting, cutting, remixing and appropriation – sheds new light, and therefore new meanings, on found images and text. Historically, representations of Africa have been marked by dualistic modes of thinking. In making these collages, my intention has been to surface the tensions inherent in these dualisms. At times jarring, at other times harmonious, the placement of images of African masks, sourced mostly from ethnographic books published during the 1960s (with sweeping titles like ‘Negro Art’ and ‘Tribal Masks’), are intercut with images from contemporary consumer culture. The proximities (of, for instance a mask from the Bajokwe tribe in Angola and two arms holding shopping bags) are purposefully uncomfortable. My purpose in creating these juxtapositions has been to reflect my own unease with the ways in which the multifaceted meanings and functions of these masks have been reduced to colonial matter historically. On the one hand I am drawn to these enigmatic forms (popularized so seductively by Picasso and the Modernist painters). On the other hand, I am uncomfortable with the commodification of these ancient objects of ritual – in particular with their widespread commercialisation in tourist markets. As Harry Garuba has recently shown, it is impossible to fully escape dualistic ways of thinking when we think about Africa. Garuba speaks about animism, and the ways in which it has been appropriated as a metaphoric vessel for everything that is the opposite of modern, and therefore everything from the socalled ‘west’. Accordingly, “the African order of knowledge bequeathed by colonialism has been to decipher and translate/transform these worlds into European constructs and fit them into European theoretical models.” (2012: online). Met Ander Oë aims to decipher these ‘European constructs’ by teasing out playfully some of their contours. In other words, by appropriating freely from the image vault of European cultural production, the collages attempt to problematise the colonial modernist order of knowledge ‘Redux’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Red Rising’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Step Up’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Heady’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Crybaby’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Beatbox’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Curious Corners’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Pool Loop’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Neo’s Room’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Shattering’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Darwin’s Room’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘The Classroom’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 48cm x 37cm ‘Ponder’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Peek’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Cyclops’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Street Scene’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘A Nervous Gerenuk’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Spooked’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Throned’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Hooded’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Quaff’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Blinded’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘The Studio’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Twinning’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 42cm x 33cm ‘Balance’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 33cm x 28cm ‘In Motion’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 33cm x 28cm ‘Volcanic’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 33cm x 28cm ‘The Steady Stare’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 33cm x 28cm ‘Met Ander Oë’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 104cm x 62cm ‘The Nature of Historical Expansion’ Mixed Media Collage on Paper, 2016 104cm x 62cm Selected Exhibitions Solo Exhibitions 2012 ‘Excess Becoming Flesh’, MA Solo Exhibition, The US Art Gallery, Stellenbosch Group Exhibitions 2016 ‘It Is What It Is’, No End Contemporary Art Space, Johannesburg ‘Break The Spell’, US Gallery, Woodfees, Stellenbosch 2015 Making Africa - A Continent Of Contemporary Design’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain Making Africa: A Continent Of Contemporary Design, Vitra Museum, Weil Am Rhein, Germany ‘The Princess In The Veld’, Absa Klein Karoo National Festival ‘Die Burger: 100 Jaar’, Suidoosterfees, Artscape, Cape Town ‘Fear And Loss: Industrial Karoo’, Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein 2014 Cape Town Art Fair, EBONY, Cape Town 2013 ‘Seven Deadly Virtues’, Absa Klein Karoo National Festival 2012 ‘Walk This Earth Alone’, Grande Provence Gallery, Franschhoek ‘Me Myself And I’, The Art Business, Piketberg CAPE TOWN 67 Loop Street, +27 21 424 99 85 FRANSCHHOEK Franschhoek Square, 32 Huguenot Street +27 21 876 44 77 WEBSITE www.ebonycurated.com FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/ebonygallery/ INSTAGRAM @ebonycurated TWITTER @ebonycurated