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Communion with the pantheon

Multidisci­plinary project Again She Reigns finds firm footing as an album

- Kwanele Sosibo

Although Again She Reigns currently exists as the new Batuk album — as a project concerned with the reclamatio­n of history — it has been years in the making. The joint work of multidisci­plinary artists Carla Fonseca and Nthato Mokgata (better known as Spoek Mathambo), surfaced this year as a series of paintings depicting several female historical figures. It was on exhibit at 99 Loop Gallery in Cape Town during August before some artworks in the series were shown at the Art3f Luxembourg Internatio­nal Art Fair soon after.

Had it not been for the restrictio­ns of movement during the tougher lockdown levels, audiences would have already seen live iterations of the work as a musical project: the principal producer, Spoek Mathambo, was the recipient of the 2020 Standard Bank Young Artist award for music.

The project pays homage to figures including Sibongile Promise Khumalo, Negeste Saba Makeda (famously known as the Queen of Sheba), Josina Mutemba Machel, Hypatia of Alexandria, Fezekile Kuzwayo, Dahomey Ahosi, Muthoni wa Kirima, and Perpetua and Felicity.

A series of eight oil paintings (which is currently being expanded), Again She Reigns presents its subjects in regal poses (mostly sitting), dressed in ornate garments and set against dramatic backdrops. Although their thrones are invisible, and their garments foreground­ed, the presence of other figures — ephemeral and shadowy — suggests that these women represent more than their solitary selves.

“They stand for women who were misreprese­nted in our history,” says Fonseca on a Zoom call, with her creative partner, Mokgata, nodding his approval, “... lots of storytelle­rs and griots who were killed and many of our leaders, from BC to even 20 years ago, who were killed and replaced with European faces.”

What Mokgata and Fonseca are aiming to achieve is a way to give voice to “violence as a language” and, from there, lay bare the continuity of that violence.

“There was a wide range of women

whom we discussed [ including with] the possibilit­y of learning more about their stories,” says Mokgata. “By the time we got it down to a set of them that interested us in their various fields, we found that there was a martyr story underlying: women who just gave to society and that same society just flipped on them.

“In Hypatia’s case [a mathematic­ian and philosophe­r], it was chanting down her anti-religious side. With Perpetua and Felicity [two Christian women who refused to worship Roman gods], it was them being religious. With Khwezi [who accused former president Jacob Zuma of rape], it was growing up in the ANC and having that machine being the thing that comes for her.”

Through its visual and sonic components, the project examines various ways of speaking back, with one evocative motif being the representa­tion of embroidery through brush strokes.

Embroidery itself is a craft the artists are still mastering. “At some point in the process we had a conversati­on with Same [ Dr Same Mdluli, current gallery manager at Standard Bank Gallery] and she was showing us some embroidery done by Xhosa women artists, and some

other Ndebele ones. She was saying a huge aspect of our artistic expression comes from those forms. In these times, siwashiye in the crafts section, which, in a way, is a form of gender chauvinism.”

In addition, “it is a way of not taking the African arts seriously”, adds Fonseca. “The days of scientific skill that go into carving a mask or completing an embroidery [are often not fully appreciate­d].”

Overall, the backdrops of the artworks enhance a sense of omnipresen­ce, alluding to the martyr status bestowed on the women represente­d in the series.

“The series is very ancestrall­y based,” says Mokgata. “That’s a plane we are tapping into to get through the bullshit to get to what comforts us as the truth. With [Mozambican revolution­ary] Josina Machel, in particular, we were exploring how a lot of people’s identities get obscured.

“With the other women, we wanted to show their faces, but a big part of it is the obscuring of people’s identities. In that ancestral plane, there are no faces; we have to try and tap into our mothers for healing.”

In what Fonseca terms the “architectu­re of the garments”, as opposed

to their design and detail, another layer of contempora­ry concerns is alluded to.

Even with this confluence of mediums, it is as a work of sonic art that Again She Reigns finds firm footing. It is also in this realm that it becomes reverend, meditative and light, although — as in the paintings — an underlying tension exists, one mostly expressed by the drums.

Fonseca’s lyrics, sung in various languages but mainly Portuguese and English, are economical: sometimes allusive and sometimes direct, relying on mostly the open melodies of hooks to achieve a hymnal quality. It is a beguiling set of songs, filled with sophistica­ted tapestries of drums that animate Fonseca’s prayers without directly intruding.

There is a majesty, pomp and pageantry, but most of all, there is a softness. On the other side of that is a gnawing: feasts of decaying flesh and valleys of skeletons, all conjured primarily by some intuitive drum programmin­g.

Through a careful tincturing of, at times, contrastin­g elements, Fonseca and Mokgata conjure a perfectly

attuned soundscape in which, surprising­ly, it is not warm chords and guitar licks that do most of the heavy lifting.

This may be in the realm of house, but it is repurposed. For dance, yes, but for other ways of communing, too. “Artwise, we were in a zone and, creatively, I started to understand beat-making in another way,” says Mokgata. “I hadn’t [fully] understood how rhythm works in a South African house music context… That the bassline, the snare and the drums, push and there is a counter to that, but things are working in tandem.

“It’s a lot of syncopatio­n and the sense of a machine moving back and forth. Once I understood that, the percussion stuff came, the synth stuff came and the bass stuff came.”

What is perhaps most refreshing about Again She Reigns, and the routes it is yet to take, is the knowledge that, for the artists, it is a language in progress; a way of confrontin­g the horrors of the past so that a present, however constraine­d, may come into view.

Batuk’s Again She Reigns (Teka Music) is out on 30 October 2020. The album is available on all digital streaming platforms

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 ??  ?? Reclaiming our history: (from left) Senegalese writer Mariama Bâ; Ashanti queen mother Yaa Asentwaa; and Congolese human rights activist Neema Namadamu are some of the subjects of a growing number of paintings that make up Again She Reigns. A version of the exhibition has been shown at the 99 Loop Gallery in Cape Town and at the Art3f Luxembourg Internatio­nal Art Fair
Reclaiming our history: (from left) Senegalese writer Mariama Bâ; Ashanti queen mother Yaa Asentwaa; and Congolese human rights activist Neema Namadamu are some of the subjects of a growing number of paintings that make up Again She Reigns. A version of the exhibition has been shown at the 99 Loop Gallery in Cape Town and at the Art3f Luxembourg Internatio­nal Art Fair
 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Collaborat­ive art: Nthato Mokgata (aka Spoek Mathambo) and Carla Fonseca make music together as Batuk. The duo’s new album, the latest iteration of the multidisci­plinary project Again She Reigns, is available from Friday.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Collaborat­ive art: Nthato Mokgata (aka Spoek Mathambo) and Carla Fonseca make music together as Batuk. The duo’s new album, the latest iteration of the multidisci­plinary project Again She Reigns, is available from Friday.

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