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Johan Thom, currently on residency at the Nirox Foundation (http://www.niroxarts.com) until the beginning of June 2013, is producing a new series of works around the theme of an elephant skull.

He explains: ‘I have long been fascinated by English sculptor Henry Moore’s series of artworks drawn from his observations of an elephant skull. A biologist gave the skull to Moore after a visit to Africa in the 1960′s. Moore was fascinated by the complex form and it became his favourite natural object. Recently I had the opportunity to study the series first-hand at the Tate Britain in London and now wish to rethink the material encounter with the elephant skull by producing a new series of artworks in different media (including video; photography; printmaking and drawing).’

For the etchings/ printing project four large-scale etchings of approximately 2m x 1m will be produced in collaboration with some of South Africa’s most prominent artists (Willem Boshoff; David Koloane and Diane Victor). According to the Artist’s Proof studios, this may well be the largest project of its kind ever in South Africa.

Photos will be posted on Twitter as the project evolves @JohanThom

 

Thom Studio

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videoabend: Still Fighting Ignorance & Intellectual Perfidy

Film
Mittwoch, 03.04.2013, 20:00 – 22:00 Uhr
Motorenhalle - Wachsbleichstraße 4a, 01067 Dresden

Der Kurator Kisito Assangni ist anwesend und gibt im Gespräch mit Frank Eckhardt eine Einführung. Zwischen den Blöcken und zum Ende steht er zur Diskussion bereit.

http://sfip-project.blogspot.com

Der Videoabend präsentiert eine länderübergreifende Auswahl heutiger afrikanischer Videokunst. “Still Fighting Ignorance & Intellectual Perfidy” kontextualisiert afrikanische Videokunst in einem größeren kulturellen Rahmen. Im Zeitalter interkultureller Migration präsentiert [SFIP] auch Afrikanische Videokünstler/innen, die in Afrika, Europa und den USA zu leben. Ein verbindendes Element bildet das Interesse an den Beziehungen zwischen dem Selbst und der Gesellschaft. Die meisten Werke thematisieren Fragen von Alternativen, Identität, Toleranz und sozialen Beziehungen. Die experimentellen Videos konzentrieren sich auf ästhetische und methodische Perspektiven des Kampfes gegen Unwissenheit und geistige Niedertracht in der zeitgenössischen afrikanischen Kunst. Das Projekt erzählt Geschichten Afrikas von Afrikanischen Medienkünstler/innen wie durch die Linse der Beziehung zwischen Tradition und Zeitgenossenschaft.

Liste der Werke:
> * Said Afifi, Metamorphosis of the linguist #2, 4’58”, 2010 (Morocco)
> * Jude Anogwih, STOP! 2’04”, 2010 (Nigeria)
> * Younes Baba-Ali, Call for Prayer – Morse, 3’06”, 2011 (Morocco)
> * Wanja Kimani, Buttons, 2’03”, 2010 (Kenya)
> * Nicene Kossentini, Myopia, 3’13”, 2008 (Tunisia)
> * Kai Lossgott, Read these roads, 3’58”, 2010 (South Africa)
> * Victor Mutelekesha, Shadow of my shadow, 3’39”, 2009 (Zambia)
> * Saidou Dicko, Le petit Berger, 5’14”, 2011 (Burkina Faso)
> * Ndoye Douts, Train train Medina, 7’02”, 2001 (Senegal)
> * Samba Fall, Oil man, 1’00, 2008 (Senegal)
> * Nathalie M’ba Bikoro feat. Iris Musolf, Hide & Seek, 5’33”, 2010 (Gabon)
> * Saliou Traoré, Traffic mum, 10’00”, 2009 (Burkina Faso)
> * Ezra Wube, Gela 2, 1’57”, 2010, (Ethiopia)
> * Nirveda Alleck, Perfect match, 6’32”, 2009, (Mauritius)
> * Rehema Chachage, Kwa Baba Rithi Undugu, 1’23, 2010 (Tanzania)
> * Kokou Ekouagou, Taller man, 2’20”, 2011 (Togo)
> * Mohamed El Baz, FUCK THE DEATH, 11’10”, 2011 (Morocco)
> * Dimitri Fagbohoun, Black brain, 4’02”, 2010, Benin
> * Michele Magema, Interiority-Fresco IV, 2’31”, 2010 (D. Congo)
> * Johan Thom, llumination, 2’03”, 2012 (South Africa)
> * Guy Woueté, Le dilemme divin, 5’31”, 2009 (Cameroon)

Kurator:

Kisito Assangni

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Malmo Konsthall presents
*STILL FIGHTING IGNORANCE & INTELLECTUAL PERFIDY*
Video art from Africa
Curated by Kisito Assangni

2 March – 7 April 2013

MALMO KONSTHALL
C-Salen
S:t Johannesgatan 7
250 80 Malmo
Sweden
www.konsthall.malmo.se
http://sfip-project.blogspot.com

Including
Said Afifi | Nirveda Alleck | Jude Anogwih | Younes Baba-Ali | Rehema
Chachage | Saidou Dicko | Ndoye Douts | Kokou Ekouagou | Mohamed El Baz |
Samba Fall | Dimitri Fagbohoun | Wanja Kimani | Nicene Kossentini | Kai
Lossgott | Michele Magema | Nathalie Mba Bikoro | Victor Mutelekesha |
Johan Thom | Saliou Traoré | Guy Woueté | Ezra Wube

Project [SFIP] is a multi-national exhibition process and a platform for
critical thinking, researching and presenting African video art.

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National Centre for Contemporary Arts presents
 
STILL FIGHTING IGNORANCE & INTELLECTUAL PERFIDY
Video art from Africa
Curated by Kisito Assangni
 
2 November 2012 
 
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS
123342, 13, Build.2
Zoologicheskaya St
Moscow
Russia
 
Including
Jude Anogwih | Younes Baba-Ali | Saidou Dicko | Ndoye Douts | Kokou Ekouagou | Mohamed El Baz | Samba Fall | Nicene Kossentini | Kai Lossgott | Michele Magema | Nathalie Mba Bikoro | Johan Thom | Saliou Traoré | Guy Woueté | Ezra Wube
 

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Doing Research: An Exercise in Thinking about the Meaning of Artistic Research in the Academy Context

EARN Members will collaborate with dOCUMENTA(13) becoming an activating agent in the main exhibition programme and collaborating on a series of workshops and a symposium

http://www.artresearch.eu

dOCUMENTA(13)

The EARN Academies network is participating in dOCUMENTA(13). There are four strands to this collaboration: (i) activated projects; (ii) “Doing Research” a chapter of the conference “On Artistic Research” co-organised with dOCUMENTA(13) (September 8 and 9); (iii) a book on different definitions, approaches, critical responses and positions on the question of artistic research to be released in advance of the conference; and (iv) a programme of workshops by doctoral researchers (September 6 and 7).

A. Activated Projects

This participation is framed in a number of different ways and raises complex issues about the mobilisation of students and researchers within a large scale machine for visibility such as documenta. The presence of student artists and researchers as activating agents within artworks authored by other artists and articulated within the elaborate curatorial matrices of dOCUMENTA(13) creates many challenges and debates: These range from the prerogatives of academies vis-a-vis other institutions (exhibitions, biennials, showcase platforms, curatorial discourse) to the operational economies of production and the outsourcing of labour inputs. There is clearly a wide diversity of models of “activated” project – entailing different orders of student / researcher participation, input and agency. Exampels include: (i) Theaster Gates restoring and reactivating the historic Huguenot House in Kassel with student input; (ii) Paul Ryan’s Threeing comprised of situations in which three or more people create sustainable, collaborative relationships; and (iii) Robin Kahn and the Women of Western Sahara’s “jaima” (tent) project.

B. “Doing Research”

Doing Research aims to understand the various ways in which research is understood and practiced by artists – in this case artists involved the d(13) activated projects, as well as artists involved in European doctoral programs. Structuring this enquiry are a series of six questions:

B.1 Questions: Understandings of artistic research

(i) What is your definition of doing (artistic) research? Does artistic research need an institutional framework or could it be legitimized differently? Does the institutionalization of research imply an instrumental control and a reduced conception of art? Or is does it also create room for matters such as unexpected and independent artistic forms, and openness to conflict and difference?

(ii) Do current research-connotations and protocols limit the domain of artistic imagination? Or could research-based art lead to novel forms of
(critical) consciousness? What could be the implications of the research discourse for aesthetic qualities such as the non-discursive, the not-knowing, and the intuitive, and what does this mean for your practice?
Artist and researcher

(iii) Do you see your own work as research-based? How does research affect your practise and your position as an artist? Or do you consider the topic of research obsolete in the realm of art? What, then, is a current topic or emergent theme in visual art that might be an alternative to the focus on research?

(iv) What does thinking in terms of research mean for your self-understanding as an artist? Can you, as an “artist”, identify with the role and identity of a “researcher”? Or do you expect that the practice of artistic research will contribute to re-thinking and re-assessing the established concept of researcher?

B.2 Related concepts and terminologies

(v) Do you consider your practice with reference to ideas of political economy? How could an artistic (research) practice relate to current conditions of “capital” and to what are seen as the ubiquitous forms of “cognitive capitalism”? Do you see possibilities for the production of alternative social and economic strategies in your work? How could artists currently demand attention for emancipatory forms of knowledge and experience that enable the world to be thought differently?

(vi) To what extent do you think and work in terms of “knowledge production”? Is the current “biopolitical” expansion of the notion of production a theme in your work? Are these terms familiar and/or of relevance for you in thinking about your practice?

C. The Book

The book “Doing Research” (published by the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts) which features contributions from dOCUMENTA(13) artists and EARN researchers will be avialable from mid-August 2012.

D. EARN@dOCUMENTA(13) Doctoral Workshops

The format of the workshops is relatively open – Each session is with one or more artist/researchers from an EARN academy presenting on some aspect of their current research. For some researchers the workshop may be based on interpreting / responding / re-setting the agenda generated by the questions and responses from “Doing Research” (see above). But many workshops simply emerge from the priorities of the work and concerns of the students presenting. Presenters include:

1. Laura Kuch (SLADE UCL)
2. Kai Syng Tan (SLADE UCL)
3. Beatrice Jarvis (GRADCAM ULSTER)
4. Giulia Cilla(ACADEMY OF FINE ART VIENNA)
5. Ingrid Cogne(ACADEMY OF FINE ART VIENNA)
6. Elske Rosenfeld (ACADEMY OF FINE ART VIENNA)
7. Fiona Curran (SLADE UCL)
8. Martino Genchi (IUAV Bevilacqua Ateliers)
9. Giovanni Giaretta (IUAV Bevilacqua Ateliers)
10. Annette Krauss (MAHKU)
11. Jem Noble (GRADCAM DIT ASSOCIATE RESEARCHER)
12. Henna Halonen (FINNISH ACADEMY OF FINE ART)
13. Kay Tabernacle (SLADE UCL)
14. Tim Long (SLADE UCL)
15. Michael Delacruz (SLADE UCL)
16. Eleanor Morgan (SLADE UCL)
17. Johan Thom (SLADE UCL)
18. Lisa Tan (VALAND ACADEMY GU)
19. Georgina Jackson (GRADCAM DIT)
20. Rana Ozturk (GRADCAM NCAD)
21. Aislinn White (GRADCAM ULSTER)
22. Eirini Boukla (LEEDS)
23. Claire Hope (LEEDS)
24. Elke Marhöfer (VALAND ACADEMY GU)
25. Errol Francis (SLADE UCL)
26. Ming-Han Hsu (Taipei National University of Arts)

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Curated by Jayne Crawshay-Hall

You are invited to the opening of

ME 1

on Saturday the 4th of August at 18h30

 

Curated by Jayne Crawshay-Hall

A major interest within contemporary art is the increasing search for identity along with an increasing sense of self-reflexivity.  Gleason (1983:910) states that “identity came into use as a popular social science term only in the 1950s at which time it was assigned not to particular racial, cultural, or sexual differences but to the self as an existential category.” Me 1 is an exploratory exhibition featuring works in a variety of media that investigate the way we create the understanding of identity through art.  The exhibition includes works by Johan Thom, Senzeni Marasela, Lionel Smit, Rozan Cochrane, Bongi Bengu, Oliver Mayhew  and Jayne Crawshay-Hall, who all seem to be involved in the examination processes of forming, inheriting and expressing personal and social identities.  The exhibition encourages the audience to re-examine basic assumptions about identity within our “anonymous society” (Gleason 1983:69), and prompts the viewer to question preconceived ideas of identity, in order to reach a stable sense of selfhood. 

 

Sources consulted:

Gleason, P. 1983. Identifying Identity: A Semantic History. Journal of American History (69).

 

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21 YEARS AT THE BAG FACTORY ARTISTS’ STUDIOS

We would like to invite you to join us for 21BF, a 21st Retrospective Exhibition. The exhibition, curated by Melissa Goba and assistant curator Tammy Langry aims to reflect on the diversity and creativity of artists who once held or still hold studio space at the Bag Factory.

Participating artists include:

Wayne Barker || Hedwig Barry || Bongi Bengu || Belinda Blignaught || Nicky Blumenfeld || Ricky Burnett || Reshma Chhiba || Iris Dawn Parker || Bongi Dhlomo || Paul Emmanuel || Fatima Fernandes || Kate Fountain || Gordon Froud || Rookeya Gardee || Kendell Geers || Nadine Hutton || Diana Hyslop || Verna Jooste || David Koloane || Moleleki Frank Ledimo || Benon Lutaaya || Colbert Mashile || Tamar Mason || Pat Mautloa || Tshepo Mosopa || Sam Nhlengethwa || Thenjiwe Nkosi || Richard Penn || Fidel Regueroes || Joachim Schonfeldt || Lerato Shadi || Penny Siopis || Dinkies Sithole || Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum || Myer Taub || Johan Thom || Jill Trappler || Dominic Tshabangu || Hentie van de Merwe || Mary Wafer

Opening night: Friday 03 August
Time: 5:30pm to 10:30pm
Location: Bag Factory Artists’ Studios, 10 Mahlatini Street, Fordsburg

The exhibition will run until Monday 10 September 2012. Please keep your eyes on our facebook (BagFactoryArt) page for the full calendar of events during the exhibition’s run.

The Bag Factory would like to thank its funders who have made 21BF possible.

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©2012 Bag Factory Artists’ Studios | 10 Mahlatini Street, Fordsburg, Johannesburg, 2001

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Torrance Art Museum presents

STILL FIGHTING IGNORANCE & INTELLECTUAL PERFIDY

Video art from Africa

Curated by Kisito Assangni

 

July 21 – September 1, 2012

 

TORRANCE ART MUSEUM

3320 Civic Center

Torrance, California

90503 USA

www.torranceartmuseum.com

http://sfip-project.blogspot.com

 

Including

Jude Anogwih | Younes Baba-Ali | Saidou Dicko | Ndoye Douts | Kokou Ekouagou | Mohamed El Baz | Samba Fall | Nicene Kossentini | Kai Lossgott | Michele Magema | Nathalie Mba Bikoro | Johan Thom | Saliou Traoré | Guy Woueté | Ezra Wube

 

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Curatorial Notes on ‘(in)Visible bodies: Migrants in the city of gold’

I have included in Cities Methodologies 2012 three projects produced by artists from Johannesburg. Each of the selected projects encapsulates a particular understanding of the realities of living and working in the contemporary urban cityscape of Johannesburg. However, when grouped together, the relationship between movement and the visibility of the body becomes a central motif that allows for a more multifaceted, complex vision of the city of Johannesburg to emerge.

The concept of ‘migration’, as the movement of bodies from one place to another, is utilized as a useful framework through which to rethink the complex interplay between what is rendered in/visible by the symbolic, economic, political and historic dimensions of the city of Johannesburg.

The three works are ‘Challenging Mud – after Kazuo Shiraga’ (2008) by Johan Thom, the ‘Hillbrow/Dakar project’ (2007-8) by Hobbs/Neustetter and the ‘TrolleyWorks’ (2007) by Ismail Farouk.

1. Movement and complexity

All three works contain trace elements of the ongoing material movement of bodies within, into and from the city of Johannesburg:  Whether it concerns the physical act of carting over-sized baggage from the taxi rank in modified supermarket trolleys as shown in ‘TrolleyWorks’ by Farouk, using hand-drawn city maps to go searching for long-lost friends, family or familiar places located elsewhere in Africa as shown in the ‘Hillbrow/Dakar’ project by Neustetter and Hobbs, or witnessing the slow process of burying a body covered in gold presented by Thom in ‘Challenging Mud’.  In turn, this movement continues to shape the city of Johannesburg and its prominent place within Africa and the world.

Artists, entrepreneurs and people of vastly different interest and backgrounds from all over Africa and the globe continue to flock to Johannesburg in search of the reward and recognition it promises. In this regard it may be argued that the fact of the discovery of gold in 1886 remains ever-present in the Johannesburg’s contemporary status as a highly sophisticated, economic metropolis – one that is often locally referred to as eGoli, the ‘place of gold’, in Zulu. Today this idea is largely symbolic with the depletion of the gold reserves fast becoming a reality. (It is estimated that up to forty percent of the world gold reserves have been unearthed in and around Johannesburg). However, in its stead the world of corporate business, global banking, sports and electronic media continues to make Johannesburg the largest business center in South Africa and arguably all of Sub-Saharan Africa. In this way the city continues to engender a sense of hope and possibility, one it is argued here as being underpinned by the possibility of ‘becoming-visible’ by and through ones belonging to it.

In this regard, in choosing to group such different projects together I want to allow for complexity to emerge beyond the familiar post-apartheid South African narratives of race, exploitation and poverty: For example, the contemporary (im)migrant community at stake in the ‘Hillbrow/ Dakar’ project is Senegalese and not simply the European colonial settlers of centuries ago. Similarly, in Farouk’s ‘TrolleyWorks’, the harsh brutality of making a living within the informal economy of contemporary, urban Johannesburg is highlighted – the difficulty of which remains almost invisible to the more familiar narratives of economic growth/ inequity and racial disharmony that have, for better or for worse, become the lingua franca of South Africa’s ongoing participation in global society. Born in Johannesburg, Thom is a descendant of Scottish immigrants that first came to South Africa in search of better prospects now more than a century ago.

2. The Rainbow Nation

Perhaps in retrospect the miracle of South Africa’s peaceful transition to democracy under the banner of the ‘new South Africa’ in 1994, seems largely premised upon the fulfillment of a multi-racial vision, and not that of the recognition of a multi-cultural strata of ever-changing ‘migratory bodies’ through and by which a city like Johannesburg first came into existence.

Contemporary post-apartheid South Africa is the ‘rainbow nation’, a trope that is in turn largely premised upon reconfiguring the value of skin color within, and part of, a nation-state in the singular. In South Africa the value of race has long served only to divide: The implementation of ‘Apartheid’ (literally ‘separateness’) from 1940 by the National Party effectively split the country into separate territories for various racial groups. Under the Group Areas Act of 1948 these territories, or ‘homelands’ were placed under control of a central white government. Ordinary South African’s were not allowed to reside in each others’ legally designated territory and black South Africans were expected to carry a ‘pass’ with them at all times (the passes were something like passports showing their territory of origin, place of temporary residence and current employ). Failure to produce a pass could result in immediate detention, physical beatings and even deportation.

Such draconian policies were a direct result of the uneven workings of Apartheid, with cities such as Johannesburg effectively forming a part of ‘white’ South Africa. Of course with discovery of gold (amongst other minerals) a large labor force was needed to exploit this abundant natural resource. People from rural South Africa now flocked to Johannesburg. But through the policy of Apartheid black South African’s were rendered as a temporary and cheap resource of labor: they were merely migrant laborers on contract, with little to no recourse to the laws, amenities and general infrastructure such as healthcare provided by white South Africa for its white citizens. The black mine workers were effectively treated like prisoners, isolated in mine compounds and driven to and from their place of work by their employer. In this way highly profitable industries such as the gold mines were owned and managed by white South Africans (often in cahoots with conglomerates from western Europe) with black South Africans forming part of a largely unskilled, temporary labor force that could be drawn from, dispatched and ultimately dismissed at will.

But I daresay that not even the brutal machinery of apartheid could effectively control the mass migration people of all creeds and colors to a city like Johannesburg. Massive ‘townships’ (something like informal settlements) sprung up all over South Africa close to cities and sites of industry.  For example, near Johannesburg the township of Soweto – an acronym for ‘South Western Townships’ – quickly became a city unto itself, with hundreds of thousands of ‘temporary’ black workers finding refuge in its confines. Soweto is located on what is colloquially known as the ‘mining belt’ – a stretch of land (including Ekurhuleni, Boksburg, Germiston, Brakpan and Johannesburg, amongst others) where massive supplies of gold have been, and continue to be, unearthed.

Importantly, townships like Soweto became hotbeds of political activity, where anti-apartheid organizations such as the African National Congress and the Pan African Congress could flourish. Soweto is perhaps best known today for the ‘Soweto Riots’ of 16 June 1976, when the twelve-year-old pupil Hector Peterson was gunned down and killed by the Apartheid police.

3. Visible matter/ Invisible forces
Today the relative invisibility of the trolley pushing community, and indeed that of the huge African immigrant community in Johannesburg, also bolsters the possibility of their systematic economic, political, cultural exploitation within the confines of urban Johannesburg. The wave of xenophobic violence that engulfed South Africa in mid 2008 also affected Johannesburg, where at the height of the outbreak privately owned taxis would refuse to carry immigrants from elsewhere in Africa, for example (something this author experienced firsthand).

Here ‘Challenging Mud’ by Thom hints at the golden promise of better prospects and the somewhat ritualistic, though commonplace violence of its denial to the bulk of Johannesburg’s population. Access to wealth remains the privilege of a select few with various forms of social, cultural and economic inequity all fostering a deeply divided society. However, in configuring this division along purely racial lines of erstwhile apartheid ideology a broad range of narratives, lives and livelihoods are today effectively erased from public view.

Of course, as the projects included here would suggest this erasure is always temporary, contingent as it is upon the ongoing process of making (in)visible of migratory bodies within the ever changing city and the socio-economic and political narratives that seek to define & fix their place within it.  In this regard it is argued that the sheer materiality of the projects in question anchors them in a resistant ‘real’, one that frustrates the grand narratives of identity, place and belonging such as narrowly conceived of within the ‘apartheid’/ ‘post-apartheid’ continuum.

4. Migratory bodies, cities and identities

Though Johannesburg may be defined in large by it’s history, its continued relevance and prominence in the world is certainly also due to the relative ease with which one may engage with, move through and generally make yourself physically visible to others, whether it concerns making a living, striking up a casual conversation or even making art. For here within this curated grouping of artworks, beyond the well-known history of mining and the struggle against apartheid, the city of Johannesburg is conceived of in more intimate, personal and corporeal terms too. Bodies are not merely laborers or static placeholders that embody a single racial identity but are conceived of as being dynamic, ever-moving physical entities that constantly traverse and give palpable form to a city.

In short, despite the lingering importance of displacing the narratives of Apartheid, there exist a real need to think about the more intimate, corporeal gestures and interactions of say, drawing a map from memory whilst talking to strangers, of burying a family member, or even of pushing a shopping trolley through a massive, contemporary city in order to make a daily living.

Lastly, it is fitting to note that, despite their widely diverging content and focus, all three works are indeed collaborative in nature. Each of these works was made possible by intimate, personal exchanges between the artists and the different communities at stake. Even ‘Challenging mud’ by Thom, that may appear to be a rather straightforward video installation artwork, is in fact a deeply collaborative effort: firstly by virtue of the involvement of friends and family during the process of its making and, secondly, through its tact acknowledgement of the viewer via the exact form of its display in the gallery.

Johan Thom, 2012

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