The Citizen (Gauteng)

History speaks in the power of art

MAHALA: CHECKING OUT THE LOCAL SCENE CAN BE FREE

- Adriaan Roets

You may even identify a future master early, just by visiting your local university.

There’s a bizarre idea that art is sometimes not accessible. The truth is, go to any of SA’s public universiti­es and you will see some sort of exhibition, usually at no cost.

In Gauteng, heading into autumn, university galleries are ready to shine.

UJ Arts Gallery

Exhibition: Inequality: A Different Picture Walkabout When: until 18 March

Cost: free

Inequality: A Different Picture features poignant photo essays by three visual artists.

Questionin­g pervasive stereotype­s about township youth, black fathers and women’s abilities, the photograph­ers aimed to portray how three Cape Townbased individual­s have confronted various forms of inequality to realise their passions, sustain themselves and their families, and bring change in their communitie­s.

The French Developmen­t Agency spearheade­d this project with its mandate to address inequality and social cohesion.

Working with award-winning

South African photograph­er Neo Ntsoma, who mentored budding photograph­ers Andiswa Mkosi and Ross Jansen, the resulting photo essays were realised in partnershi­p with Igalelo.

This nongovernm­ental organisati­on is dedicated to equipping entreprene­urs from underprivi­leged areas of Cape Town with valuable skills, such as marketing, accounting and management, which are essential to build a successful and sustainabl­e business.

Ntsoma, one of the first black women to enrol in photograph­y school in the 1990s, says: “I realised that by mentoring fellow photograph­ers, I could empower people and multiply their potential.

“Now that I have some wisdom and experience under my belt, I feel even more obliged to guide other photograph­ers to grow and succeed in this competitiv­e industry.”

Ntsoma, Mkosi and Jansen edited their images of inspiring entreprene­urs to tell a coherent story that can be shared widely on various platforms.

Mkosi, a self-taught photograph­er, lyricist and performing artist, considers photograph­y a privilege.

“It gives us the chance to see “chapters” in people’s lives that we would not otherwise see. As a young black photograph­er, I am able to change perspectiv­es and challenge stereotype­s by telling the true narratives and rewriting those that have been told wrong by outsiders.”

Wits Art Gallery

Exhibition: Paul Emmanuel – Men and Monuments

When: from 3 March

Cost: free

For the past decade, in an ongoing project titled The Lost Men, renowned artist Paul Emmanuel has challenged convention­s around war memorials.

He has questioned which soldiers are memorialis­ed and which are erased, and the stereotype­s around soldiers and masculinit­y.

Featuring artworks from three iterations of The Lost Men, Paul Emmanuel – Men and Monuments highlights vulnerabil­ity, an aspect of masculinit­y so often denied by history and society.

The exhibition will be opened by Sonia Dona Perez, the consulate-general of France in SA.

Jave Art Centre (University of Pretoria)

Exhibition: All in a Day’s Eve When: ongoing

Cost: R50 to R150

The Javett art collection is as much a collection of works of art as it is a collection of histories recorded by SA artists. A close look into the collection uncovers themes ranging from education, culture and architectu­re to the natural environmen­t, representa­tion, beauty, the land, religion and politics, to name just a few.

This curatorial proposal wants to grapple with these themes by rethinking and rearrangin­g the way people look, think and write about the works from the modernists of the 20th century (and beyond).

All in a Day’s Eve proposes a refreshed look into these works, one that goes beyond reading them through their formalisti­c characteri­stics: beauty, light, colour, brush strokes and influences, but rather opens them up to how we can also understand them through the lens of the political climate they were produced in.

They are stripped of their perceived innocence to uncover layers of knowledge, which often remain unrecorded.

If, as an example, people begin this exploratio­n with a painting by Ivanonia Roworth (1920-2018), titled The Return from School, Genadendal (1954), they will be able to uncover and understand a lot about the intricacie­s of the lesser-known versions of history.

This painting was produced in 1954 so it is a work created within a rapidly shifting political landscape, 1954 being the year of commenceme­nt of the Bantu Education Act of 1953.

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