Daily Maverick

Penny Siopis: Rebellious Spring

The celebrated South African artist has two exhibition­s running, one in Cape Town and one in Johannesbu­rg.

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ARebelliou­s Spring, 2023, rtist Penny Siopis has 50 years of experience; she has had more than 36 solo exhibition­s and has participat­ed internatio­nally in more than 160 group shows. Collection­s include the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n in Washington, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, and the Tate in London.

Her painting career has had five periods, starting with 1980-84 and Cake Paintings, for which she used unconventi­onal implements, such as piping nozzles and other cake decorating tools, to make high-relief impasto works.

At this time, conceptual­ly, she was associatin­g the traditiona­l technique of impasto with that of convention­al representa­tion of the female body. The choice of using cake decorating tools was also attached to the premise of the female body, firstly regarding convention­al women’s duties and work. Secondly, it was commercial­ised as a commodity to be desired and bought.

Over time, the excessive impasto surface changes, with the outside layer drying long before the interior, led the surface to wrinkle and crack. In this manner, works of this first period served to reflect inevitable reality, sobering the viewer from the fallacy of idealising the female body.

The second period was History Paintings, from 1985 to 1995. Historical painting is considered the highest achievemen­t in the European art tradition and Siopis created an almost definitive visual propositio­n with Patience on a Monument: ‘A History Painting’ (1988).

In the centre it has a female African native figure sitting in what is represente­d as a junk yard, filled only with a lot of images illustrati­ve of colonial perception­s, misreprese­ntations and curated history.

The collage is assembled with torn-up history books. Considerin­g that history is a tale told by the victors, the painting proposed the erasure of colonial triumph as maintained by its history books. In addition, it showcased the environmen­t of what would be the new victor in South Africa, supposedly an African woman, because all the men were banned and in prison. A new regime would commence in a state of mess. Observing the condition of South Africa in 2023, Siopis’s painting was predictive and prescripti­ve for its time.

Jumping forward to the current period, of Ink and Glue Paintings, being exhibited at Stevenson Gallery in Johannesbu­rg under the exhibition title Feral Figuration­s until 5 May, it must be noted that the artworks are abstract at first glance but, upon closer scrutiny, wild figures appear.

The art style is a surface of a 15-year journey, inspired by the experiment­ation of chance and contingenc­y, form and formlessne­ss, explored through the appreciati­on of materialit­y. More often than not, artists lose the connection with the material they use. Siopis is maintainin­g her relationsh­ip with the material, allowing it to define new techniques of expression every time she engages with the act of image making.

As a multimedia artist, she also has a nine-film exhibition hosted by Stevenson Gallery in Cape Town, titled Never the Same Water Twice (until 29 April).

In 2010, when Stevenson Gallery commission­ed artworks from her, she created the film Obscure White Messenger, the title taken from how former president Nelson Mandela described Dimitri Tsafendas, assassin of apartheid prime minister Hendrik Verwoerd. A biography by Harris Dousemetzi­s in 2019 labelled the same subject The Man Who Killed Apartheid.

The nine films in the Cape Town show are a contempora­ry archive in form and narrative. They include The Master is Drowning, 2012, a portrait of the wealthy Caucasian liberal who shot and wounded Verwoerd.

Communion, 2011 is a historical film about the Irish medical doctor and nun, Sister Aidan Quinlan, who died at an ANC Youth League event in Duncan Village in the Eastern Cape in 1952. A 2021 book about the event by Mignonne Breier was called Bloody Sunday: The Nun, the Defiance Campaign and South Africa’s Secret Massacre.

Welcome Visitors, 2017 is about a Zimbabwean jazz band with the longest name that created a jazz sub-genre, appreciate­d by the American jazz fraternity. Famous jazz artist Louis Armstrong visited them in Zimbabwe.

On 10 October 2021, the Greek Orthodox Church in Maputo commemorat­ed the life and memory of Tsafendas with a service that coincided with the 200th anniversar­y of the Greek Revolution. Siopis, asked if her work assumed the same gesture, replied: “I was interested in macro narratives and the relationsh­ip of memory to history ... then I did a huge amount of research and reading, with all aspects of archives I could find.”

The Master is Drowning, 2012 features a remake by Miriam Makeba of the Vuyisile Mini song Basopa nants’ indonda emnyama, we Verwoerd (Watch out Verwoerd, here comes the black man). Mini was hanged by the apartheid regime.

Some of the films showcase a high level of conviction from Caucasian liberals in the anti-apartheid struggle. Siopis explained: “I wasn’t trying to give voice to Caucasians in an obvious way, to say that they’re left out of history and they should be there, not in that

She unfolded the mystery of abstractio­n in her own perception, that ‘abstractio­n can be representa­tional, the same way the representa­tive

can be abstract’. That statement is emblematic of her working formula, which

is ‘openness’

 ?? ?? The Penny Siopis artwork
glue, ink and oil paint on canvas and currently on show at Stevenson Gallery, Johannesbu­rg.
The Penny Siopis artwork glue, ink and oil paint on canvas and currently on show at Stevenson Gallery, Johannesbu­rg.

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