Mail & Guardian

Tshepiso Moropa

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‘After taking a six-month hiatus, I finally picked up a pair of scissors and I started cutting again. Figure by figure. Flower to flower. Carefully pasting each fragment on an A5 cardboard sheet, I am finally starting on a new body of work. Something that I have been contemplat­ing doing for a while, was completed in 36 minutes.

For this particular collage, I searched for an archival image of a black wedding that took place in the early 20th century, in various digital libraries (of course, taking into considerat­ion that the photograph I choose is not copyrighte­d.)

I knew that I had found the right photograph when its compositio­n matched the one of my parents. I then printed the archival image on film paper to get the look and feel of a photo album.

The collage also features a handwritte­n love letter, which symbolises the union taking place on each photograph shown. The letter stamp is appropriat­ely put on the top left side of the handwritte­n note. I intentiona­lly put the letter in the collage in hopes that the collage itself is viewed or “read”’ as a love letter. A love letter to my parents; a nostalgic love letter to my mom and dad.

I knew that the new body of work that I wanted to begin had to involve archival images of black weddings to cast a spotlight on marriages and their identity throughout the years. I wanted to do this by superimpos­ing photograph­s onto archival images of weddings, just like a reimagined archive.

After weeks of researchin­g and talking to uncooperat­ive relatives, I realised that I had reached a dead

Til Death Do end. Then, one day, a wedding picture of my mother and my late father appeared on my phone. I had scanned this particular image a few years before.

I didn’t have the physical collection with me at the time. Its location was in a storage facility in Honeydew. And after gruelling hours of searching through dusty books and forgotten clothing, I found the images neatly tucked away in a dark blue box.

The collection is valuable to me. The images are symbols of a sacred union between my parents. Ultimately, they went their separate ways 13 years ago, but the images are remembranc­es of my father, and of a time when they were together.

This is why I enjoy working with archival images. They illustrate a piece of informatio­n about people who were once with us. It makes me pleased to know that I didn’t have to look far for inspiratio­n. They were near me all along.

 ?? Us Apart ?? Visual love letter: Tshepiso Moropa used her parents’ marriage as inspiratio­n for her latest collage, titled
Us Apart Visual love letter: Tshepiso Moropa used her parents’ marriage as inspiratio­n for her latest collage, titled

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