Posts Tagged ‘performance art’

Blood is the new black

August 10th, 2010 by christo

Murray Turpin in performance at the opening of his new exhibition at Artspace
photo by Christo Doherty

Murray Turpin in performance at the opening of his new exhibition at Artspace in Johannesburg, 10 August 2010.  Entitled "Triangulate the Death Rate", Turpin describes his solo show as  "a tale of death, love, politics, identity and geometry". He had painted the phrase, "blood is the new black" using his own blood shortly before the performance in which images from his paintings were tattooed onto his bare flesh.   Turpin’s paintings and mixed media works explore the existential implications of life in contemporary Johannesburg with a visceral harshness held in check by the artist’s strong graphic sensibility.  As stated in his exhibition manifesto:  "The truth and art may be of little consequence in the end with a gun to your head. Unseen moments, repressed memories. Blood is the new black".  The exhibition is only running until 17 August; so make a point of getting down to Parkwood to take a look.

Artist Murray Turpin in performance at Artspace Gallery, Johannesburg
photo by Christo Doherty

Results of the Performance Art Workshop at The Bag Factory

August 1st, 2008 by christo

Johan Thom at Bag Factory
Johan Thom’s performance artwork as presented at Rites of Fealty/Rites of Passage

‘Rites of Fealty/ Rites of Passage’,  was a one-night exhibition of new performance artworks by a group of emerging South African artists.  Held on 29 July at The Bag Factory in Fordsburg, the exhibition followed an intensive 10-day workshop in performance art presented by Johan Thom. The workshop was structured as a non-hierarchal laboratory, with each of the artists selected for participation already having established a visible presence in the South African cultural sphere. The participating artists were Ismail Farouk, Anthea Moys, Kemang Wa Lehulere and Murray Turpin who all share in a multi-disciplinary approach to artistic expression, freely mixing elements of fields as far as urban geography, digital sound sampling, video, public performance, dance and theatre into their oeuvres.   (Text adapted from  The Bag Factory  press release.)

Johan Thom in performance at The Bagfactory, Fordsburg

Bronwyn Lace in performance at The Bag Factory

Bronwyn Lace in performance at The Bag Factory.

Sidewalk Reservation in performance at The Bagfactory

Sidewalk Reservation in performance at The Bag Factory.

All photos by Christo Doherty

Spier performance art at the Johannesburg Art Gallery – while Joburg burns

May 20th, 2008 by christo

Unsaid -  performance art at JAG

Unsaid - confrontation
Kai Lossgo and Anthea Moys in the performance art piece, Unsaid, ath the Johannesburg Art Gallery, 18 May 2008.

It was a rather odd experience to watch performance art performed at the Johannesburg Art Gallery on a balmy Sunday afternoon with the occasional burst of gunfire in the background as ethic violence raged around parts of Joburg.  Up from Cape Town were the winner and finalists in the Spier Contemporary Art Awards  2007 – the performance category which featured prominently on this year’s awards.  Various pieces have been staged around Wits University School of Arts and outside the Sandton Convention Centre.  I didn’t catch any of those but I did see two pieces on the last day at the JAG.

The first up was Unsaid by Kai Lossgot and Anthea Moys. In a short piece  barely four minutes long -  a domestic slapstick tinged with pathos – the two performers faced each other across the lip of the fountain. While water poured down the abyss below them; they spat streams of water at each other,  acting out the universal stages of a relationship, balanced on the edge of the fountain, the threat of break up and failure.  Anthea Moys in her grandmother’s vivid red dress; Kai Lossgot more enigmatic in a plain white shirt and grey pants.  They leaned away from each other and towards each other, held together in a force-field of love, or habit,  before exploding into confrontation and spitting.

Unsaid - Alienation

The  afternoon featured the overall winner of the Spier Contemporary Art Award in 2007: Peter van Heerden’s Flowers for my Flesh, a perverse  interpretation of the  fairy tale in which van Heerden, naked except for pair of veldskoens and a floral kappie, acts the part of Sleeping Beauty  in a kind of bugger drag. He follows a trail of flowers across the Fountain and through the Gallery to his Prince Charming. His prince turns out to be a  paunchy lout  in a ragged old South Africa Tshirt who beats him before returning sulkily to his braai while cheesy Afrikaans pop music blares around the Gallery courtyard.

Flowers -  sleeping couch

Flowers - awakes after a kiss

Flowers - curves

Flowers - run around

The sight of this beefy Afrikaaner man clambering around the Gallery fountain in his white kappie and iron harness provoked a wave of interest amongst the people relaxing in the park behind the green pallisade fence  that separates the space of art from the space of public recreation. Within a short time the entire population of the park was pressing against the fence to catch of glimpse of  van Heerden splashing through the water in search of his true love.

Flowers - into the Gallery

.Flowers - True Love

Van Heerden’s performance was acted out with great gusto and physical risk-taking, from the provocation of his nakedness to his scrambling up the face of the fountain and his rope climbing; but it felt that he was performing the last rites of a cultural complaint whose time has passed. Exploding the ethnic pieties, the stranglehold of patriarchy and sentimental romance, in Afrikaaner culture,  no longer seems very relevant or very urgent.   There are new forms of ethnic consciousness which demand articulation. Perhaps by other artists with direct experience of these forms.  A few blocks below the Gallery in central Joburg and in other parts of the city, this new and more violent form of ethnic consciousness  seems to be emerging into the daylight of the South African psyche. Thousands of people have been displaced, while many have been attacked, injured and even killed by mobs waving pangas and singing the old songs of the struggle against Apartheid.  Somehow, the Lossgot and Moys piece, although smaller and less elaborate, by exploring the human all-too-human contradictions of relationships on the edge of precipice, seemed to speak to the reality of current life in Johannesburg.

(All the above photos by Christo Doherty -  photo albums of the performances can be viewed at Flickr )

East Rand Mobs
Photo from The Times coverage of the anti-foreign violence in Johannesburg.