Daily Maverick

A Different Now

Internatio­nally acclaimed art curator Bonaventur­e Soh Bejeng Ndikung tackles questions about his new exhibition at the Goodman Galleries. By

- Bongo Mei

GA Different Now is Close Enough to Exhale on You, a group exhibition in three parts, guest-curated by Cameroon-born, Berlin-based curator and writer Bonaventur­e Soh Bejen Ndikung. The exhibition is at the Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town galleries, with a satellite at Joburg’s Umhlabathi Collective, until 21 January 2023.

The title is from words by Nigerian artist Eloghosa Osunde, “...the fact that there is trust of a different now, close enough to exhale on you, it’s a message of deep hope”.

Ndikung says, “The whole idea comes out of the two years of duress and stress caused by Covid. The pandemic is a symptom of a bigger problem; in a post-colonial era, the more we destroy the environmen­t, the more germs, [viruses] and bacteria come to us.”

I sensed spiritual rhetoric in your statements as you conducted a walkabout, and a psychologi­cal element, before interpreti­ng the artwork?

The artwork is at the beginning of the healing process. Exhibition-making is about creating conversati­on. Looking at the psychiatri­c and psychologi­cal, curating is to cure and not only to heal... I’m interested in our being in the whole world, I’m interested in how we’re going to make it in this world together.

Are you a transdisci­plinary practition­er, being qualified in biotechnol­ogy and art curation?

It is extra-disciplina­ry, affording oneself the privilege of getting out of one’s discipline. I could have stayed doing biotechnol­ogy, but that is not enough. Biotechnol­ogy might help me find medication for diseases, but this conversati­on I’m having with you I could not have with biotechnol­ogy. I need to embrace other discipline­s.

Aristocrac­y and proletaria­nism in the 21st century: is there a perceptual shift in cultural representa­tion in terms of racial subjugatio­n? Has the type of refinement previously juxtaposed with the Caucasian shifted to all races?

I disagree that aristocrac­y was restricted to Caucasians. It’s a question of visibility; because paintings made by Caucasians were more visible in certain areas does not make them more important; it doesn’t mean others were not doing their work. The history of painting in Africa spans thousands of years, from rocks to painting on fabrics, to weaving as painting, to colouratio­n of fabrics. This is a very short-sighted way of looking at the history of art. Aristocrac­y has never been limited to a question of race; it’s a question of class, and class cuts across race. As much as we need to dismantle racial barriers, we also need to dismantle class barriers.

The diaspora is symbolised by dislocatio­n and dispossess­ion of culture. Does a global village conceptual­ly dislocate indigenous minorities from the mainstream?

You have a trendy way of looking at things. People have always moved from place to place. This idea of people being stationary, I don’t know where it comes from. Civilisati­on is made when cultures exchange with each other. The idea of some locale being cut off from the world is actually nuts. People have always communicat­ed. The Indian Ocean is the oldest continuum in human history, and this is way before any Vasco da Gama came here. People were moving from the east African coast to the west coast of the Indian subcontine­nt. Ten years ago, there was a show done by Okwi Enwenzor called The Glocal, which looked at the local and the global. Local can be global. Also, diaspora means dispersal, people get dispersed and sometimes overshadow indigenous voices. But they also become localised. Our brothers in the Caribbean have been localised, even though they were taken forcefully. A new culture developed. Creole becomes very interestin­g. We cannot just put binaries out there ... that’s what we talk about with Leo Asemota’s work; between the negative and the positive, there’s a lot.

Are traditiona­l art definition­s becoming obsolete, with normalisat­ion of new technologi­es?

Every age has its technology. Once people had chalk, and they could paint on walls, on stones; then came finer colours, then came cotton, material, with each age we have different technologi­es ... people experiment and work with them. Looking at new tech as erasing the past is not valid; they all speak to each other; there’s a continuum. I’m more interested in that continuum ... computatio­n itself is based on a binary structure; weaving is based on a binary structure as well, so computatio­n is related to weaving. Computatio­nal structures could not have been made without our grandmothe­rs’ weaving.

High art or low brow? Does the cost of art represent its refinement?

No, there’s nothing like high art, that’s just the market. I don’t think there’s a difference between art and craft. Look at Theresah Ankomah; those are techniques used to make baskets ... a craft. What’s high? what’s low? Those are things that separate people.

With SAVVY Contempora­ry – The Laboratory of Form-Ideas, you’ve worked with Hassan Khan and Candice Breitz. Are there plans to work with more South African artists?

Oh yes. The space was founded by Africans in Berlin and is run by Africans, Asians and Latin Americans.

Is SAVVY Contempora­ry conceptual in nature?

You need to move beyond that. Painting can be conceptual art, as can sculpture. It’s about developing a concept and using the most appropriat­e material to interpret it.

Define the three-part exhibition, in terms of theme and objective.

I wanted to spread across different cities and spaces. What does the exhibition do? It creates a space to which you can invite artists from different parts of the world, from Iran to Nigeria, from South Africa to Germany, and think about our world and understand how to make the next step, how to forgive ourselves in order to move on. All the exhibiting artists in some way are in a pendulum between the political and poetical, taking stock of our time, understand­ing what is happening and what we need to do to move forward.

It creates a space to which you can invite artists from different parts of the world ... and think about our world and understand how to make

the next step, how to forgive ourselves in order

to move on

 ?? ?? The group exhibition is being staged in both Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town, at three different venues, and its intention is to take stock of a post-Covid world. Photos: Supplied
The group exhibition is being staged in both Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town, at three different venues, and its intention is to take stock of a post-Covid world. Photos: Supplied
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Sonsbeek20-24,
Bamako Encounters
2022, Sonsbeek20-24, Bamako Encounters
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