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New C& Special Print Issue #artofcritique Featuring our Mentees’ Texts

A celebration of the work that has been produced in the frame of the C& Critical Writing Workshops and the C& Mentoring Program since 2016.

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

“If we think of this set of differences beyond an evaluative model that upholds a standard for what is sufficiently, good, – away from international standard – we achieve other forms of appreciation and communion. We might, instead, have a chance to consider the differences in how people produce knowledge and to recognise that it is virtually impossible to reproduce it for immediate consumption in some other location.” Irit Rogoff

 

A Momentum of Events

Since 2016, C& has hosted four workshops and nine editions of its mentoring program with the support of the Ford Foundation. The C& Mentoring Program invites writers with new, developing, or emerging practices to establish a mentor-mentee relationship with senior arts writers. We aim to support art writers and critics in evolving their experiences and reflexive explorations over an extended period. Our intention with both the workshops and mentoring program has been to expand a network of writers and offer participants opportunities for exchange across different areas of cultural practice. It has also been about broadening the basis for discussion, through contributions to C& as well as to other outlets. As such we acknowledge the mentors, mentees, and C& team whose time and work has made all this possible.

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

Mentors
Sean O’Toole, Hannah Pool, Thom Ogonga, Dagara Dakin, Patrick Mudekereza, Obidike Okafor, Lara Longle, Paula Nascimento, Jota Mombaça, Diane Lima, Ali Al-Adawy, Ramiro Camelo, Bernard Akoi-Jackson, Syham Weigant, Fadzai Muchemwa, Enos Nyamor, Miriane Peregrino, Costa Tshinzam

Mentees
Lukorito Jones, Sarah Abdu Bushra, Andrew Kazimbwe, Don Handa, Rosie Olang, Ronjey Francis, Celpa Diakiese Nsungua, Mariusca Rhitty Moueme Moukengue, Moimi Wezam Mushamalirwa, Costa Tshinzam, Zaza Muchemwa, Nyadzombe Nyampenza, Rutendo Chabikwa, Nadine Morais, Yola Balanga, Luamba Muinga, Marcos Jinguba, Miriane Peregrino, Jessica Melo, Tila Likunzi, Marwa Elsayyed, Nicolas Sanchez, Adjo Kisser, Mavis Tetteh- Ocloo, Yasmine Mechbal, Merilyn Mushakwe, Bwanga Kapumpa, Lorna Telma Zita, Gloria Mpanga

This print issue is a celebration and commemoration of the work that has been produced through the mentoring program. It brings together a selection of ten texts written between 2017 and 2022 around art, exhibitions, and curatorial practices from the contexts in which the writers live or work. Rather than reflecting a single preoccupation with legibility or translation, the texts give indication of what shapes the organization and distribution of local or contextual art practices, including, among many other things, language, infrastructure, and individual affinities.

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

Adjo Kisser situates us in a time capsule of iconic images from the period marking Ghana’s post-independence. The idea of “time-preciseness” comes our way through Tila Likunzi’s view of Délio Jasse’s exhibition Fragility of Time. Both writers, the artist, the photographic archive, and exhibition produce multiple relations to time and place. In an interview with Merilyn Mushakwe, Helena Uambembe asks the artist about the creation of her installation work What you see is not what you remember, a recreation of living moments that encapsulate points in time within history. And what time is it? 

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

Luamba Muinga writes, “it is the time of Black emergence from colonialism to self-affirmation, before a time that ages these issues, given the volatility of discourses, making them ghosts of reflection.” Reiterating that urgency, Nicolás Vizcaíno Sánchez calls attention to strategies for repositioning Black bodies in the (re)production of images on the history of people of African descent. Gloria Mpanga brings us back to the question of power in the use people make of other people’s land, approaching colonial histories by looking at a residency project linking works of artists from cities with very different contexts of production, language, and experience. Language continually saturates the living being as well as illustrating conditions of production. Marwa Elsayed shows how the cookbook is a form of resistance through which Marwa Benhalim casts a view on issues of power and language. Elsayyed highlights collaboration and other strategies Benhalim used to respond to the COVID-19 shutdown.

C& Special Print Issue #Artofcritique, 2023. Photo: C&

The roundtable with Bwanga Kapumpa, Enos Nyamor, Miriane Peregrino, and Lorna Telma Zita focuses on why the participants write, their practices in recent years, and the state of art writing. Nyadzombe Nyampenza looks at an exhibition that reflects Paul Wade’s unstoppable interest in making art and his ongoing influence on the country’s contemporary art scene. Mavis Tetteh-Ocloo creates a portrait of Theresa Ankoma’s fiber- based art and weaving practices as well as her interest in object biographies. Costa Tshinzam writes about experimentation in FM Gustave Giresse’s work, witnessing the power that new technologies have to revolutionize contemporary artistic practices.

Together these writers position art and writing as practice, theory, vigilance, responsibility, poetry, and life – re-invented in each instance.

The C& Team

 

Read the full issue here.

 

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