Art Fag City
Great interview with Paddy Johnson of AFC on artlist here.
She’s also super cool and needs your support. Have I mentioned that AFC is one of the greatest NYC artblogs around?
Great interview with Paddy Johnson of AFC on artlist here.
She’s also super cool and needs your support. Have I mentioned that AFC is one of the greatest NYC artblogs around?
Yeh, I totally forgot that I had these images on my camera; I had gone down to help Khwezi Gule out with some computer trouble at the Johannesburg Art Museum (yes, I am the default art-geek for all Macs in the fine art scene of Jozi), and then did a quick run down to see the Norman Catherine exhibition.
My feelings on NC are always different, depending on my mood. Sometimes I find him frightening, other times, hilarious, and on more than one occasion, boring. Those first two I think would make him happy, but I’m not so sure about the last issue. Still, it was nice to see so much of his work, which is always well-executed, in one place, especially when that place is his home country. Below are some quotes I found online, then a pic of some stuff from the front wall of the gallery show I took these shots at. Good run of solos at JAG this year, for those who have not yet noticed – my faves so far are/were Kentridge and Goldblatt….
From the-artists.org:
In 1969 he held his first solo exhibition consisting of oil paintings on wood, bone, wire and an assortment of found objects. His art has since undergone several metamorphoses, from the pristine airbrush paintings of the 70s to the frenzied, ritualistic mixed media works of the early and mid 80s; the wire sculptures and tin can works of the late 80s, and the primitive-futuristic paintings of the early 90s which provided the seeds for his pre-millennial menagerie of anthropomorphic beasts. In the thirty years spanning his past and present output, Catherine’s visual trademarks have included rough-edged comical and nightmarish forms, rendered in brash cartoon colours. His idiosyncratic vision – a combination of dark cynicism and exuberant humour, as well as his innovative use of everyday materials, has secured his place at the forefront of South African contemporary art.
From cama.org.za:
For Norman Catherine, the crudity and sophistication of an artwork stem from ‘the mixture of the primitive and the futuristic’. Through these imagined timeframes, Catherine accesses his wild dystopian vision of the present. His paintings and figures are darkly comic, bold and lurid in execution. ‘There’s an angst in my work that will never go away,’ says Catherine. ‘It was there before I knew anything about politics, really.’
Catherine’s qualification is critical. The fact that South Africa has changed has done little to soften his ‘black side’, but a mutation has occurred. Gone are the ‘raw expressions of fear and fury that allow no catharsis’: John Howell’s observation made in Art Forum (Dec. 1986) was a response to Catherine’s searing earlier mixed-media works with titles like Suicide, House Arrest and Intensive Care. For Catherine, the dulled sense of crisis and despair, spawned by the States of Emergency imposed on the country by the apartheid government in the ’80s, has fallen away. What has surfaced in its place is a growing awareness of inner-city psychosis caused by escalating violence, the burgeoning underworld of gangsterism and crime, and the spread of corporate corruption and subterfuge. This urban rot Catherine sees as being not limited to Johannesburg, but part of a national and international pathology.
and the show:

Theo Eshetu, Trip to Mount Ziqualla, Ethiopia, 2005 © Theo Eshetu, Image from the International Center for Photography
The new exhibition curated by Okwui Enwezor at the International Centre for Photography in New York has just recently opened.
This was a fantastic exhibition of photography, clearly indicative of the high level of contemporary African work, which is far more energetic, lively and real than any current American or European photography. I don’t claim to be any sort of expert on photography but the show really does prove it. Current western work just looks bland and boring next to this vibrant and important work. As the curatorial brief states, the artists have taken up a problematic or focused attention on social subjects. They deal with the reality of everyday living.
South African artists were well represented on the show- Moshekwa Langa, Zwelethu Mthethwa, Jo Ractliffe, Tracy Rose, Mikhael Subotzky, Guy Tillum and Nontsikilelo Veleko. Some were present at the opening – a packed gallery on 43rd street across the road from the ICP University.
The show is definitely worth a look if you can get over there, otherwise check out their website.
Another show that I saw, expecting something exciting, was Bibliography by Rachel Whiteread at the Luhring Augustine Gallery. I was particularly disappointed to find cast after cast of the inside of cardboard boxes.. A token cast was transferred to bronze to allude to that solid heavy expensive monumental feeling. Most of them were placed on shelves and under chairs- a reference to Bruce Nauman’s cast of the underneath space of a chair. I found her previous work exciting-House and her work for the Trafalgar square Plinth. Its had a solidity and austere atmosphere about it, but this show clearly demonstrates that she just hasn’t had a new idea in years. There were some collages as well which looked as if they had been put together on the flight over to New York. Shoddy and uncaring in their execution.
She seems to be just cashing in on her name now and this kind of thing upsets me. I cannot take it seriously at all when people who have previously done such grand work, are able to degenerate into work that is opportunistic and does ones reputation no good at all- www.luhringaugustine.com. A review by Ken Johnson can also be seen here on the New York Times site.
My new motto: Tell it like it is. Few people do in the artworld.
I’ve actually not seen Bridget Baker’s latest show (in Cape Town – see that Joao Ferreira link for images), but I really like BB as a person, and if the raves between her Mail and Guardian review and Artthrob review are any indication, she’s really on a roll with her ongoing series. I remember seeing some of the earliest Blue Collar Girl photos between her place and the Cancelled Kebbles (who killed Biggie?) in 2004, and knowing she was onto something (a search for Bridget on this site also returned heaps of entries – did I mention she’s rad?). Read up those linkies, and also check out her Artbio this month.
Hear and Now at the Market Theatre, Johannesburg, is co-directed by that award-winning team who gave us Tshepang: Lara Foot Newton and Gerhard Marx. It’s a kind of psychological drama with a few really great jokes and monologues.
At its core, Hear and Now is worth seeing if only for Gerhard’s trademark brilliant set design, and Lionel Newton’s performance as the lead. The latter sometimes over-acts, admittedly, but from my perspective this has more to do with the workshopped script than his own abilities. The details of character throughout are very strong but, as alluded to, the plot is heavily overdone (given its relatively light premise), and it turns too easily towards an/the end. I have to say that I also found some of the third person narrative structure a little condescending – I think we could figure a lot of it out, guys…
In all, tho, the piece makes me miss writing, makes me slightly jealous, makes me again want to beg Gerhard to collaborate with me. Only one day left for the show!
That’s M. River and T. Whid Art Associates, at Wits School of the Arts (University of the Witwatersrand).
There was an awesome response to my MTAA presentation at Upgrade! Joburg yesterday – really interesting discussion followed, mostly about their continual throughline of accenting relationality, as well as their gamut from punk work (Pirated Movie), through community building (Reference Resource), and discussions with the history of contemporary art (1ypv). Below is more from Christo (great to hear a different perspective from that of the presenter!)…
Via atjoburg.net, and posted by Christo Doherty (photographs also by Christo):
The second Upgrade! Event featured the work of New York net artists, MTAA, in a presentation by Nathaniel Stern. Nathaniel began by playing an audio greeting to Johannesburg from T.Whid, one member of the MTAA duo and then launched into an eclectic overview of MTAA’s work, which emphasized the subversive intelligence and humour which is a common thread throughout their work.
For Nathaniel, MTAA – the artists T.Whid and M.River – embody a deliberately anti-academic, punkish attitude towards Net Art. Since the beginning of their collaboration in 1996, they have pushed the possibliities of Net Art and the limits of intellectual copyright in an impressive range of works.
The enthusiastic audience in the Wits Digital Arts seminar room were treated to glimpses of works such as Random Access Mortality from 2002, in which MTTA took a couple of hundred short samples from either side of the “Hello Operator” single by The White Stripes and built an interface which allows users to access these samples in a completely random fashion.
One theme that emerged strongly from Nathaniel’s presentation was MTAA’s strategy of "updating" classic pieces of performance art from the 1970s and 80s. These Updates are characterised by a wry retrospective irony towards the "classics" combined with a canny repurposing of the work using the interactive potential of the Internet. Perhaps the most striking example of this was MTAA’s 1 year performance video (aka samHsiehUpdate) This piece, commissioned and hosted by Turbulence.org, reworked a classic piece of performance art, Sam Hsieh’s "One Year Performance, 1980 – 1981". The MTAA update, however, shifted the onus of the performance from the artist’s to the viewers. MTAA transformed the act of living in a cell for a year into over 160 video clips of themselves living in a cell. Viewers who logged onto the site were invited to watch the video clips for a year.
Nathaniel Stern showing one of this favourite pieces by MTTA,
"Five Small Videos About Interruption and Disappearing".
Other works covered in Nathaniel’s presentation included Endnode (a.k.a Printer Tree) a networked sculpture created during their 2002 Residency at the Eyebeam Gallery in New York; Pirated_Movie in which MTAA screened a pirated version of Disney’s "Pirates of the Caribbean" with a new soundtrack improvised by DJs and musicians; and DC 9/11 – The Evildoers’ Remix a guerrilla edit of a pro-Bush propaganda film.
A clip from "Pirated Movie" – a participating DJ is visible in
silhouette on the right hand of the screen.