FADA

FADA

Saturday, March 21, 2015

PAST IMPERFECT // FUTURE PRESENT, an Exhibition curated by VIAD. Opening Tuesday 24 March at 18:30.


Minnette Vári. The Revenant, 2012. 
One Channel Projection. Courtesy of the artist and the Goodman Gallery

FADA Gallery is transformed into a black cube (lower ground floor) to host the much anticipated VIAD curated exhibition titled, Past Imperfect // Future Present. The exhibition features the work of visual practitioners engaging with complexities of, and rethinking new possibilities for, contemporary archival practices using lens-based and newmedia technologies. In reflecting on the fragments, traces and omissions within archives of the past and present, these practitioners are reimagining and reconstructing new narratives from within their contemporary contexts.  
(All photographs the blogger)

FADA Gallery Exhibition Opening
Date: Tuesday 24 March.
Time: 18:00 for 18:30.
Hours: Monday to Friday 09:00 - 16:00.
The exhibition runs until 1 may 2015.

Past Imperfect // Future Present explores multiple approaches through which the archive may be ‘addressed’. In their work, practitioners engage with archival content (drawing on, intervening, reinterpreting, reframing, re-activating and re-appropriating); refer to, and ‘speak with’, the archive, thereby setting up a conversation that takes place in-between the spaces of interchange.
Works on the exhibition reflect and expand on issues raised in Archival Addresses: Photographies, Practices, Positionalities, a platform that forms part of VIADUCT 2015 - an annual programme convened by the Visual Identities in Art and Design Research Centre, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Johannesburg.



Michelle Monareng. Removal to Radium2013. 
Mixed Media 3 Channel Video Installation, 
Continuous   cycle ~1:15 mins. Edition of 3 + 2 Aps
Past Imperfect // Future Present explores multiple approaches through which the archive may be ‘addressed’. In their work, practitioners engage with archival content (drawing on, intervening, reinterpreting, reframing, re-activating and re-appropriating); refer to, and ‘speak with’, the archive, thereby setting up a conversation that takes place in-between the spaces of interchange.
Some practitioners address archival sources in ways that prompt viewers to re-think how artworks are received. Readings of images are framed by both the practitioners' and viewers' contexts. Those working in the digital realm - at times playfully and mischievously - push the archive into new territories, exploring the ongoing expansion and diversification of archival forms. By unraveling archival modalities and unsettling its norms these practitioners raise questions around consumption, accessibility, ownership, ethics, power and control. Practitioners using social media and digital spaces blur the lines between the intimate and the public through ongoing performances of (self) identities within, and in response to, constantly transforming and emergent digital terrains.

In selecting particular works that highlight a diversity of practices, a (thin) slither of archival addresses is brought into view. 

The exhibition includes works by Ayana V. Jackson, Santu Mofokeng, Michelle Monareng, Zanele Muholi, Alexander Opper, Uriel Orlow, Karin Preller, Jo Ractliffe, Tabita Rezaire, Bogosi Sekhukhuni & Minnette Vári.


ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Ayana V. Jackson - a US-born photographer and filmmaker - explores varying constructions of African and African-American identities in primarily early 20th century photographic archives, through the use and imaging of her own body.


Michelle Monareng. Removal to Radium2013. 

Mixed Media 3 Channel Video Installation, 

Continuous   cycle ~1:15 mins. Edition of 3 + 2 Aps

Michelle Monareng is currently completing an MAFA at the University of the Witwatersrand. Her work explores the undoing of archival interpretations and reallocation and transformation of factual information into the realm of artistic imagination.


Santu Mofokeng. The Black Photo Album/Look at Me1997.
Slide, 35 mm, 80 slides, projection, Black and White

©Santu Mofokeng, courtesy Lunetta Bartz, MAKER, Johannebsurg
Santu Mofokeng is a Johannesburg-based photographer. He focuses on explorations of photography invested with political significance, prompting a wider enquiry into issues of ownership, power and memory. With subjects as visually diverse as religious rituals, images of black identities or desolate landscapes, Mofokeng subverts the comfort zones of racial and cultural memory, questions the politics of representation and the objectifying gaze of the photographer.

Zanele Muholi works and lives in Johannesburg. In her work Muholi explores often forgotten and omitted black queer and trans visual histories as a form of resistance against hate crimes on the continent and beyond.

Alexander Opper is an architect, designer, artist, writer and Senior Lecturer in the Dept. of Architecture, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Johannesburg. In his design practice he explores relationships across traditionally separate disciplines such as art, architecture, furniture design and language. His current artistic practice focuses on the overlaps and connections between the theory and production of architecturally/spatially inspired installation environments. This growing body of work thematically gravitates around a mode of critical spatial practice, held together under the working title, Undoing Architecture.

Uriel Orlow lives and works in London. He produces multi-media installations that explore blind spots of history and forms of haunting and bring different image-regimes and narrative modes into correspondence. Orlow studied Fine Art at Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design and The Slade School of Art, London and philosophy at the University of Geneva, graduating with a PhD in Fine Art in 2002. He is currently a Senior Research Fellow at University of Westminster and Visiting Artist at Geneva University of Art & Design (HEAD), Geneva, Switzerland.


Karin Preller. Year-end party, Johannesburg, 1960s (left)
Chinese Restaurant, 1970. painted in 2014, both Oil on canvas 
Karin Preller is a Johannesburg based artist who holds an MA(FA) from the University of the Witwatersrand. In her work, she investigates visual ambiguities and ambivalences present within photographs and their translation into paint. 

Jo Ractliffe is currently Cape Town-based. She draws on a range of photographic and art practices including snapshot, documentary, forensic and studio photography, as well as installation, video and projections. In her work Ractliffe engages with ephemerality, desire, loss, longing, spaces of absence, silences, the known and the unknown, attempting to depict that which lies outside of the frame. 

Bogosi Sekhukhuni was born in Johannesburg one year after Nelson Mandela was released from prison, and one day after his release date. He studied Visual Arts at the University of Johannesburg and works with the digital artists’ group, CUSS. Sekhukhuni critiques personal and political identities within post-1994 South Africa. 

Tabita Rezaire is a Danish-Guyanese artist-filmmaker and video/new media curator based in Johannesburg. She focuses on political aesthetics of resistance in screen-based practices, engaging in cinematic urban intervention and digital activism through videos, curated screenings and camera workshops in marginalised urban environments. Exploring the performativity of encounters, online and offline, she addresses issues of sex, race and gender confronting media stigmatisation and occidental hegemonies. 

Minnette Vári is a Johannesburg-based artist and part-time Lecturer in the Dept. of Visual Art, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Johannesburg. She works across a range of diverse mediums including ink drawing to video installations, often incorporating performance elements into reworked historical documentary and archival footage. In her work, she conflates self and history, examining how identity arises out of South Africa’s traumatic past (see http://www.goodman-gallery.com).

Minnette Vári. The Revenant, 2012. 
One Channel Projection. Courtesy of the artist and the Goodman Gallery



FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON THE EXHIBITION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Maria Fidel Regueros
Visual Identities in Art and Design Research Centre
Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture 
University of Johannesburg
Email: mariafr@uj.ac.za
Work: +27 (0)11 559 1442
Cell: +27 (0)82 373 6127


 www.facebook.com/viad.fada 
twitter: @VIADResearch

Sunday, March 1, 2015

And the winner is …….Thuthuka Awards Exhibition 2014/5 Sho! Shoe Jewellery


Thuthuka Award Winners 2014-2015



This year’s winner of the Thuthuka Awards, Themba Mantshiyo is one of six very talented, dedicated, skilled and creative students registered at the Jewellery Department of the University of Johannesburg. 

Arguably the most promising group of students I have ever had the privilege of teaching, I taught them in their first and second year. Two students, Milda and Themba, received their basic skills training at FET colleges before enrolling for the university programme in design and manufacture. 



Amongst them is a talented and creative individual, Zadie Becker (Second Prize – achievement award), who matriculated with 9 distinctions. Working as a closely-knit group they compliment each other on all levels, the perfect incubator situation to foster the next generation of young jewellery designer makers. Their well-deserved awards are therefore a timeous accolade on their journey of creative development. The exhibition showcases a diverse range of design concepts and ideas for shoe accessories and is open daily, Monday to Friday from 09:00 to 16:00. The exhibition runs until 12 March.








Overall Winner
Universities
“MULTITASKING”
Earrings: Sterling silver and brass. Woven silver bracelet, sterling silver neckpiece. Combined into a single show trimming.
THEMBA MANTSHIYO
Gauteng Province
3rd year
University of Johannesburg



Overall Winner
Jewellery Schools And FET Colleges
“FIREFLIES AND POWER LINES”
Sterling silver, brass and copper, rings and earring. Heel trimming becomes single drop earring.
MALEHLOHONOLO MOOROSI
Gauteng Province
Level 2
Ekurhuleni Jewellery Project


Second Prize
Achievement Award
ZADIE BECKER
3rd Year
University of Johannesburg
Oxidised silver piece attached by magnet onto shoe or fascinator.



WINNER
ACHIEVEMENT AWARD AND OVERALL WINNER
“MULTITASKING”
Earrings: Sterling silver and brass, woven silver bracelet, sterling silver neckpiece. Combine into a single shoe trimming.
THEMBA MANTSHIYO
Gauteng Province
3rd year
University of Johannesburg

WINNER
EXCEPTIONAL TECHNIQUE
MILDAH MOTSHEGWA
3rd year
University of Johannesburg
Sterling silver filigree pieces as shoe trimming or neckpiece.





WINNER
INNOVATION AWARD
“DRAGONFLY”
Silver shoe trimming or pendant.
PETRUS CHAUKE
2nd year
Central University of Technology

SECOND PRIZE
INNOVATION AWARD
VUYISANANI MAVENGANA
2nd Year
University of Johannesburg
Shoe trimming or bowtie

WINNER
NEW TALENT AWARD
GUGULETHU DTSELE
1st Year
University of Johannesburg
Woven thread. Shoe trimming or brooch

WINNER
EMERGING DESIGNER
“SHOE MAIL”
PEARL NAPE
Level 1
SEDA Limpopo Jewellery Incubator


JOINT SECOND PRIZE
EMERGING DESIGNER
LINDOKUHLE NGWENYA
Level 1
Ekurhuleni Jewellery Project

COLLEN MLOMBO
Level 2
Zurel Training College

WINNER
INSPIRED IDEAS
“RECONSTRUCTED BEE WINGS”
PIET JAWU
Level 2
Ekurhuleni Jewellery Project

SECOND PRIZE
INSPIRED IDEAS
BASETSANA MOAGI
Level 2
Atteridgeville Jewellery Project

WINNER
GREAT POTENTIAL
“ARMOR”
OBAKENG SELALEBI
Level 3
Virginia Jewellery School

SECOND PRIZE
GREAT POTENTIAL
LULU KHESA
Level 3
Orbit Training College

WINNER
UNIQUE DESIGN
KARABO SEPHIKOE
Level 3
Orbit Training College

RUNNER UP
UNIQUE DESIGN
“SCARAB”
FRANK KWEZI
Level 3
Orbit Training College


Thuthuka Judges –
Elizabeth loubster, masana chikeka, tiaan nagel, albert maree, walter oltman and vernoica anderson – congratulate all the winners and commend them on their sterling work!


Last year, the thuthuka jewellery development project took another step forward by introducing young mentors. We’ve matched postgraduates with community jewellery students to provide hem with hands-on teaching and mentorship from their peers. These ‘twinnings’ have been intensely focused, inspiring and fun for everyone involved. The feedback has been overwhelmingly positive and we are encouraged to continue the teamwork in the future.