blank projects, Le Cap, South Africa
02 Jun 2016 - 02 Jul 2016
In her first solo exhibition, Groenpunt, Bronwyn Katz revisits the unearthing of human remains that took place in the Cape Town suburb of Green Point in 2003. Utilising the inner foam from used chairs, mattresses and other household furniture, Katz contemplates the violence of the act of unearthing and its relation to the disinheritance of the land in the history of South Africa.
The title of the exhibition is multifaceted, referring both to the Cape Town suburb and to the place of Katz’s upbringing in Groenpunt, Kimberley. This location is also where the majority her known ancestors have been buried.
Katz’s ongoing practice engages with land as a repository of memory. She reflects on the notion of land as lived experience, and on the ability of the land to remember and communicate the memory of its occupation. Through her practice she seeks to provoke the act of memory.
Bronwyn Katz (b. 1993, Kimberly) lives and works in Cape Town. She graduated with a BFA from the Michaelis School of Art in 2015 and was awarded the Simon Gerson Prize for her exceptional body of work. Katz’s body of work includes sculpture, installation, video and performance. Her sculptural work, Ouma grootjie (2015), was included in ‘3 881 days’ (blank lab, 2016), and she participated in ‘New Monuments’ at Commune 1 in Cape Town (2016). In 2015, she was a Sasol New Signatures merit award winner. Katz is a founding member of iQhiya, an 11-women artist collective, which recently performed at ‘#theopening’ at Greatmore Studios, Cape Town (2016).
Samson’s new body of work, Ubuqhoboka Maqhoboka, builds upon his last exhibition at blank, Thirty Pieces of Silver (2015), in which he presented a series of paintings depicting flowers, fruit and skulls, reminiscent of the Vanitas genre of Dutch Renaissance painting. The refined floral arrangements restrained by their Classical vases which appeared in Samson’s previous work have become wild and they overflow in these new paintings. This impression of dynamism is extended by the detailed lines of foliage, sketched in pencil and chalk, which appear simultaneously to burst through and recede from the geometric shards of oil paint that surround them. Ubuqhoboka Maqhoboka also introduces a new, sculptural element to Samson’s work: included in the installation are the broken fragments of cast concrete replica statues in Classical Greek or Roman style, evoking the ruins of an empire.
In the process of making these new works, Samson contemplated South Africa’s colonial history and the effect of Christian missionary schools on the identities of their African students, whom they baptized and educated in the Western tradition. The influence of the church is apparent in the work of artists who attended missionary schools. Together with Christian belief, Western values had been instilled in these black students, and they were treated as inferior by white Europeans. Simultaneously, they were distrusted by some black Africans who believed that they had turned their backs on their communities and their value systems.
This distrust is reflected in the title of Samson’s exhibition, Ubuqhoboka Maqhoboka. The Xhosa people who had been Christianised and educated by missionary schools, were referred to as umaqhoboka, and their ‘un-African’ way of doing things termed ubuqhoboka. Samson has portrayed this identity conflict, and its manifestation in South African art through his disintegrating references to Classical and Biblical imagery. Thirty Pieces of Silver used Western-style painting to question South Africa as the product of colonialism. Ubuqhoboka Maqhoboka questions painting itself as a colonial product.
Cinga Samson (b1986, Cape Town) lives and works in Khayelitsha, Cape Town. ‘Ubuqhoboka Maqhoboka’ is his second exhibition at blank. His first, ‘Thirty Pieces of Silver’, was presented in 2015. Samson has participated in several group shows, including ‘In the night I remember’ curated by Kabelo Malatsie (Stevenson, Johannesburg); ‘Our Fathers’ curated by Kirsty Cockerill and Chantal Louw (AVA Gallery, Cape Town) and ‘Strata’ at Greatmore Studios, where he completed a residency in 2011. His first solo exhibition, ‘Rusting Iron’, was held at the AVA Gallery in Cape Town, 2011.