Business Day

Rendering the Other, with not a hint of exoticism

• As we all head for the plughole of urban hypermoder­nity, Eatwell s subjects will both endure and disappear ’

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Cultural appropriat­ion has become a cause célèbre in the court of public opinion; it has its staunch defenders and its fierce detractors. It has also, rather unhelpfull­y, become a catch-all term. People apply it to extreme cases such as Jessica Krug and Rachel Dolezal, white US women who built careers on the claim that they were black. Then there are the more banal controvers­ies: singer Adele donning a bikini decorated in the Jamaican flag and knotting her hair to mark the cancelled Notting Hill Carnival.

If dress-up and sustained pretence both fall into the category of impersonat­ion, then another contested form of cultural appropriat­ion is representa­tion. Novelists, in particular, get defensive on this score. If it is the prerogativ­e

nay, the job of a writer to

enter into the minds of characters and to depict them through acts of sympatheti­c

“imaginatio­n ”, surely no person or group should be off-limits? In principle, no, of course not. But in practice, far too many authors fail in this task because they lack knowledge, experience and insight that would allow them to portray demographi­c others in

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all their complexity.

Visual artists face a similar

challenge. Large swathes of Western art history entail an appropriat­ive gaze: subjects who are foreign to the artist

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and the immediate or intended audience are simultaneo­usly exoticised and domesticat­ed, rendered as mysterious or bizarre but also contained and tamed within the frame of the

canvas. The culture that is appropriat­ed entertains and intrigues: a curiosity on display, rather than something intrinsica­lly deserving of respect and research.

By contrast, when an artist immerses him or herself in a culture and takes the time not simply to observe a subject and develop a rapport but to build trust, confidence and mutual goodwill, this too is conveyed in the work. Such is the case with Lynne-Marie Eatwell, whose paintings I encountere­d on a recent visit to the Orient Hotel in the Francolin Conservanc­y outside Pretoria.

Readers may recall that on my last visit to this art-intensive hotel I grappled admiringly with

the sculptures collected in the Tienie Pritchard Museum. I wasn t sure, then, if my

response to Pritchard s

evocative bronzes could be entirely separated from the sublime experience I d had the

night before at the Orient s

Restaurant Mosaic. This time, in a gesture towards objectivit­y, I encountere­d the art before I indulged in the delights of chef Chantel Dartnall s floral

inspired spring menu.

It s hard enough viewing paintings with critical rigour when they are exhibited in such a space; the Orient s collection

covers two floors on symmetrica­l wings of an architectu­rally grand gallery.

It s almost impossible to do

so once furnished with a glass of the finest champagne by sommelier par excellence Moses Magwaza.

I tried. Really. But Eatwell s

large-scale canvases blew me away.

They transport the viewer, in the first instance, to the Mongolian steppes. Here eagle hunters gather to compete, their bodies caught in action or repose. The painter s

palette conveys the thin, blue air; her brushstrok­es capture stillness but suggest movement the flash of an

eagle s wing, the shimmer of a

fur hat in the wind.

Now we are in Cambodia, through an impression­istic treatment of a fisherman casting his net into Tonle Sap Lake, upriver from the Mekong Delta. A few metres on and we are on the Camargue in France, where Eatwell s favourite nonhuman

’ subjects, horses, emerge into the morning light in iridescent shades of white, gold and blue.

HUMAN HISTORY

Those of us who are worldlywis­e know better than to fall for such cliché. And yet, and yet ... aren t these scenes marvellous?

Aren t these people, in these

places, profoundly important to our understand­ing of human history, diversity, dignity? When much of the world s population

has gone down the plughole of urban hypermoder­nity or has succumbed to climate collapse, will they still be around? Or will they be among the next to vanish?

There is, along with celebratio­n, a mournful sobriety in the oil and watercolou­r portraits taken from Eatwell s

series Hunter-Gatherer: Faces of the Khoisan. The artist pays tribute to the Ju/’hoansi Bushmen of Namibia without sentimenta­lity or false nostalgia. Nonetheles­s, the viewer knows that the subjects into whose eyes we stare signal both endurance and, ultimately, disappeara­nce.

 ??  ?? CHRIS THURMAN
CHRIS THURMAN
 ??  ?? Paying tribute: ‘ Sebe Boo from Ilauru Village’, Lynne-Marie Eatwell, graphite and watercolou­r, 122x91cm. / Supplied
Paying tribute: ‘ Sebe Boo from Ilauru Village’, Lynne-Marie Eatwell, graphite and watercolou­r, 122x91cm. / Supplied
 ??  ?? Iridescent Camargue: ‘ Tell Us You Love Us’, Lynne-Marie Eatwell, oil on linen, 120x90cm. / Supplied
Iridescent Camargue: ‘ Tell Us You Love Us’, Lynne-Marie Eatwell, oil on linen, 120x90cm. / Supplied

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