September 10 - October 12, 2002
This group exhibition, linked to our previous exhibition CON/TEXT, brings
together works related to identity and ideology by the following artists.
Berni Searle
In this installation Profile, the artist's personal identity is expressed by
icons impressed into her skin. The impressions refer to oppositions that
played a role in constructing her identity: Black/White, European/Middle
Eastern, Muslim/Catholic, European/African, South African/African, and the
historical background of colonialism and apartheid. The eight faces include a
cross, rakam (Muslim prayer), British imperial crown, Apartheid-era riot
shield, African beadwork panel, Dutch windmill, and cloves, which refer to
the spice trade that led the Dutch to colonize the Cape and linked them with
Muslim states to the east, where some of Searle's ancestors originated.
Brett Murray
Murray's plastic works bespeak the ideological functions of cultural icons
and of humor, particularly from the point of view of America's global
influence and its blindspots. In several recent works, a Bart Simpson-like
figure is used to convey Murray's signature irony. In Getting the
Fundamentals Right, "Bart" is a banner-bearer for fundamentalist ideologies,
different yet identical. Recently, Murray won a controversial competition for
Cape Town's largest public sculpture of recent years. It consisted of a
monumental bronze replica of an African ancestor figure, which sprouted
numerous, polychrome Bart-like heads.
Fritha Langerman
Langerman's recent interest in imaging the body was inspired by genetic
engineering and the project to map the human genome. This work applies these
themes to gender issues, and considers how equations and logic have been used
as methods of stereotyping women's roles. Langerman considers the layering of
techniques and materials within the boxes as metaphorical of how codes and
other types of information both obscure and reveal.
Rudzani Nemasetoni
Nemasetoni explores how identity is evidenced, documented, articulated, and
erased. His sculptures examine the construction of a current aesthetic of
many inner-city African-American women, called "BlingBling." His monoprints,
executed in the Bob Blackburn print workshop, focus on identity documents for
himself, his family, and such known artworld figures as Bob Blackburn,
Alexander Sakharov, and Bill Wright. His family's documents are the notorious
"pass books" that blacks were forced to carry under Apartheid. Passes
identified bearers and limited their rights and identities. The print
entitled Litany, is he for real? is a standard form used for South African
crime reports. It also harks back to theories of typing that linked
criminality with physical appearance. The monoprints are transfers, each
unique though produced from an absent master.
Karen Lijnes
Using one continuous thread, Lijnes conjures facsimiles of South African
currency notes onto everyday consumer bags. Nature confronts culture. Lijnes
remarks, "We think the wild animal is dangerous. It is not. It is endangered.
We think of the plastic bag as immaterial and banal. It is not. It is
dangerous." The patience of the woman's stitch, the "traditional" obedience
and meekness of women, meets the wild animal and consumerism, which "tames"
us. The mode of artistic production contrasts with the mass production of
both bags and currency. Currency carries the added irony that it signifies
value but, as mere paper, is virtually worthless. A common currency unites
us, but ideology differentiates us.
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