Wim Botha
Bob Cnoops
Hugo Crosthwaite
James de Villiers
Sasha Fabris
Gordon Froud
Rookeya Gardee
Ashley Johnson
Nkosinathi Khanyile
Ania Krajewski
Michael Matthews
Nhlanhla Mbatha
Rankadi Mosako
Diane Victor
Dasart exhibits a collection of international contemporary art. This exhibition comprises installations, paintings, digital art, video and sculptures which highlight aspects of life for contemporary artists in Southern Africa. The current exhibition has shown in Johannesburg, South Africa, as well as Los Angeles, USA and Tijuana, Mexico. Dasart is an artist's collective concerned with reinvigorating the social dimension of art to counter the degradation of the environment and nurture a universal sense of identity.
At the Pretoria Art Museum DASART will be exhibiting
Transmigrations from 8 April. This cross-cultural exhibition combines
the art and ideas of thirteen contemporary South African artists with a
Canadian and an American artist. Transmigrations has returned from
exhibitions in Los Angeles and Tijuana, where it was nominated for the
Premios Cultura 1999 award. After Pretoria the exhibition will travel to
the Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein (Sept - Nov 2002), the Ann
Bryant Art Gallery, East London (Nov - Jan 2003), the Durban Art Gallery
and the Tatham Art Gallery, Pietermaritzburg (dates to be confirmed).
Dasart is an artist's collective concerned with
reinvigorating the social dimension of art to counter the degradation of
the environment and nurture a universal sense of identity. The artists
use their art to communicate aspects of South African life that range
from religious to political and sexual expressions. Artists from other
countries and regions are invited to participate, thus gaining a
personal stake and enriching the joint communiqué. Each exhibition
therefore has different work.
The concept relates to story-telling in the belief
that the many levels within myth and enchantment are vital to our
well-being. Western ways of seeing accept the culturally familiar and
reject as superstitious that which is culturally 'divergent'. In South
Africa, it is necessary to understand and respect one another before we
can project a mutual state of being. The works on show all express the
authority of the object since we experience things through the medium of
the body. Objects are delimited energies that stand still long enough
for us to take an emotional impression off them. The exhibition offers a
unique perspective on the diversity of South African art experience,
ranging from psychotherapy to intermingling of cultures, art derived
from rural craft, myth and enchantment, the legacy of Colonialism and
Apartheid.
Sasha Fabris' Games Ubiquitous are wood carvings of
corn cob penises and rituals of grinding. She uses the woodcarving
technique therapeutically to cope with sexual experiences that are
extrapolated to gender power struggles. The Musallah by Rookeya Gardee
consists of seven prayer mats constructed out of seeds, spices, rice and
other items originating from a domestic environment. A cross-cultural
mix of Muslims collaborated with her and the finished piece hints at
their diverse origins. Reliquary for an Eggbeater is a quirky work by
Gordon Froud which sees the eggbeater as a domestic symbol, both cage
and liberator. A large wire eggbeater is suspended within a
polycarbonate vitrine. Plastic Barbiedoll parts are caught within the
splines, reminiscent of sexual bondage. Eight smaller eggbeaters
fashioned out of beercans flutter around the perimeters while
multi-coloured plastic plates filled with spices and legumes, displayed
like hawkers' wares on South African pavements, possess the floor. Other
plates attached to the sides of the vitrine have universal symbols cut
into them that provide tantalising glimpses of the contents within.
The shifting power and gender relations in South
Africa provoke Nkosinathi Khanyile, who is concerned with the social
predicament of rural Zulu women. His installation, entitled Isintu, is a
collaboration between the artist and craftswomen. The woven grass
pillars he makes, daubed with mud and dung, are not intended as phallic
symbols but are derived from traditional African dolls and reaffirm
feminine spiritual power. He seeks to re-establish the myth of womanhood
as the epitome of the Earth Mother by the use of certain shapes and the
emphasis on feminine crafts like weaving and beadwork.
Bob Cnoops is a photographer who composes with ritual
imagery derived from African tribal customs. He uses the cyanotype
photographic process and exposes onto handmade paper. His interest in
this theme stems from a course he attended on African Divination
techniques. Such shamanic intentions also inform Ania Krajewski's kites
in the The Mediators. The kites are seen as mythological intermediaries
between the Gods and Earth. Their function is to take imprints of the
Earth and thus they are visceral with allusions to animal hides;
tortured and burned in reference to the abuse of world resources.
The 3-D soil paintings of Nhlanhla Mbatha are about
cracks and the documentation thereof, particularly related to plate
tectonics and ancient Gondwanaland. James De Villiers' Architecture of
Air, combines traditional oil paintings of clouds with computer
generated air sounds. Wim Botha's sculptures are carved out of prison
release papers and other documents that regulate human movement. A
suspended, androgynous figure, hovering between growth and decay,
confronts a Sable head mounted like a trophy, thus contrasting ideas of
freedom and classification and evoking the spectre of death.
Several artists are concerned with the legacy of
Apartheid and Colonialism. Diane Victor's charcoal drawings deal with
the revelations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Rankadi
Mosako paints industrial landscapes that contrast first and third world
experience of technology. His paintings suggest a barbed-wire barrier to
social advancement. Ashley Johnson's piece, The Bullet, symbolises the
ongoing intercourse between Western Civilisation and Africa. The kinetic
aspect of a huge bullet striking an earthy, primitive torso, which opens
to allow a tree with a head to fall forward, is a jarring image of
modern experience.
Michael Matthews' videos deal with violence in
Kwazulu-Natal as in Jazzcows (Part III:Weapon) which uses rough drawings
of the emergency symbols in a telephone directory alongside an insidious
soundtrack. Another video, Women thru Women thru Men, explores media
rituals of how women are represented in magazines. His three paintings
called Cultural Symbols: Afterimage I, II, and III, are of a softer,
more sensual nature and deal with the transposition of ethnic cultural
symbols into fine art. David Hlynsky is a Canadian artist who will be
showing digital prints. The images were taken on a recent visit to South
Africa and represent David's response to the experience. Margi Scharff
is an American artist who travels to and lives in Third World countries.
She documents her experiences in book form and makes art out of any
debris she finds. At present she is in Asia and her collages are from
this journey.
Image: Bob Cnoops, Ritual Imaginery
Cor. Schoeman and Wessels Streets Arcadia Park 0083 Pretoria
Republic of South Africa
Visiting Hours: Tuesday to Saturday: 10:00 - 17:00
Sunday: 12:00 - 17:00
Wednesday: 10:00 - 20:00
Closed on Mondays and Public Holidays
Further information on Transmigrations: Rituals and Items as well as archival information on Dasart can be accessed at web site