Cape Times

Power of stones

Installati­on opens at the Goodman Gallery next month

- Staff Writer

CHILEAN-BORN New York-based artist Alfredo Jaar will present Men Who Cannot Cry, works inspired by a cairn photograph­ed by the artist on a trip to Robben Island, at the Goodman Gallery from December 15 to January 12.

This will be his second solo exhibition with the gallery in Woodstock.

His exhibition is a meditation on this stone monument and the poignancy it holds for the country today.

The stones were placed by former political prisoners who returned to the island in 1995 to commemorat­e the 5th anniversar­y of their release.

The gallery said for seven hours a day, five days a week, the inmates spent their time in a quarry, extracting this limestone used to whitewash roads on the island.

After years of repetition, this seemingly futile exercise exacted a heavy physical toll.

It is said that on the day Nelson Mandela left the island, he was unable to shed a tear.

The years of mining had permanentl­y damaged his eyesight, a fact referenced in the exhibition’s title.

When Mandela returned to the island in 1995 he was the first to pick up a stone and deposit it a few steps away, beside the road.

Soon fellow ex-prisoners joined in stacking stones.

In Xhosa culture this gesture is associated with asking for good fortune and is known as an “isivivana” (cairn), marking in Khoi tradition the site of a sacred place.

For Jaar this moment represente­d the spontaneou­s creation of an “extraordin­ary public monument of reconcilia­tion”.

According to the gallery, the fact that the isivivana was still standing when Jaar took his photograph years later further transforme­d the stones into a “metaphor for the extreme precarious­ness” of South Africa’s post-apartheid journey and the road that still lies ahead.

In Men Who Cannot Cry, Jaar reflects on this metaphor through various representa­tions of the monument.

Beside Jaar’s original photograph of the isivivana itself, there are five geometric neons he describes as “speculativ­e forms that try to interpret the fragility of the monument in metaphoric­al, spiritual, and political ways”.

An additional work presents a stone Jaar picked up from Robben Island, shown in a plexiglass light box atop a pedestal.

Every few minutes the light intensifie­s in the box to the point that the stone practicall­y disappears, becoming a black dot that embeds itself in a viewer’s retina like an after-image effect.

The Sound of Silence is the final work on the show.

The photograph­ic installati­on features 15 images of Robben Island taken by Jaar during his visit.

The series includes shots of Mandela’s cell, as well as a view from the cell’s window unto the lime quarry upon which Men Who Cannot Cry has effectivel­y been built.

 ??  ?? Artist Alfredo Jaar will present Men Who Cannot Cry, an exhibition inspired by a cairn photograph­ed by the artist on a trip to Robben Island.
Artist Alfredo Jaar will present Men Who Cannot Cry, an exhibition inspired by a cairn photograph­ed by the artist on a trip to Robben Island.
 ??  ?? ALFREDO JAAR
ALFREDO JAAR
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa