Agenda 27 Oktober - 02 November 2013
Zondag 27 Oktober
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
African Roots - expositie Mickael Bethe Selassie
Op dit moment is het fascinerende werk van de Ethiopische kunstenaar Mickael Bethe Selassie niet alleen te zien op Artzuid in Amsterdam, maar ook bij galerie Huijs Basten Asbeck in Groenlo, in een kleine stock-expositie met een aantal van zijn recente beelden. Allemaal even kleurrijk als wij van Bethe Selassie gewend zijn, maar wel kleiner (van 30 tot 70 cm.) en daardoor ook beduidend minder kostbaar dan zijn beide beelden in Amsterdam. Daarnaast een overzicht van schilderijen en grafisch werk van de Nigeriaanse/Nederlandse kunstenaar Toyin Loyé.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden’ in het Afrika Museum
Van 1 september t/m 31 oktober 2013 is in het Afrika Museum in Berg en Dal de bijzondere fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden: een reis langs de slavenhandel in Brazilië, Angola en Zeeland’ te zien. Fotograaf Hans van Rhoon en journalist Jeroen Junte maakten hiervoor afgelopen voorjaar een reis langs deze drie locaties, waar de oorsprong ligt van de Nederlandse slavenhandel. Met indringende foto’s en reportages hebben ze vastgelegd hoe 350 jaar later in Brazilië, Angola en Middelburg verdeeld wordt omgegaan met een gedeeld verleden.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
The Mandingo Ambassadors - Music from Guinea
Woensdag 02 Oktober 2013 22:00
t/m Woensdag 30 Oktober 2013
This legendary band was formed in the late 1960's by guitarist Mamady "Djelike" Kouyate and singer Emile Soumah. They made some of the most beloved music of their generation. Now based in New York, Mamady Kouyate has decided to revive The Ambassadors. Every Wednesday night.
Maandag 28 Oktober
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden’ in het Afrika Museum
Van 1 september t/m 31 oktober 2013 is in het Afrika Museum in Berg en Dal de bijzondere fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden: een reis langs de slavenhandel in Brazilië, Angola en Zeeland’ te zien. Fotograaf Hans van Rhoon en journalist Jeroen Junte maakten hiervoor afgelopen voorjaar een reis langs deze drie locaties, waar de oorsprong ligt van de Nederlandse slavenhandel. Met indringende foto’s en reportages hebben ze vastgelegd hoe 350 jaar later in Brazilië, Angola en Middelburg verdeeld wordt omgegaan met een gedeeld verleden.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
SID-lezing ‘South-South alliances and tri-angular cooperation’
Maandag 28 Oktober 2013 17:00 - 18:45
Renu Modi, Senior Lecturer aan het Centre for African Studies van de Universiteit van Mumbai, bespreekt hoe opkomende landen zich in toenemende mate distantiëren van het traditionele model voor ontwikkeling zoals gepropageerd door de OESO. Deze landen benadrukken samenwerking tussen ontwikkelingslanden als een nieuwe methode om zich op basis van gelijkheid en gedeelde ervaringen te ontwikkelen. Wat is er nieuw aan deze aanpak en wat kunnen we er van leren? Gratis toegang: registration@sidnl.org
The Mandingo Ambassadors - Music from Guinea
Woensdag 02 Oktober 2013 22:00
t/m Woensdag 30 Oktober 2013
This legendary band was formed in the late 1960's by guitarist Mamady "Djelike" Kouyate and singer Emile Soumah. They made some of the most beloved music of their generation. Now based in New York, Mamady Kouyate has decided to revive The Ambassadors. Every Wednesday night.
Dinsdag 29 Oktober
Abe Mathabe (ZA) en Wim van der Meij (NL) - demonstraties etsen en drypointen
De twee 'masters of the intimate' zoals we ze eerder noemden, Wim van der Meij uit Zutphen en Abe Mathabe uit Zuid-Afrika, geven twee keer een demonstratie geven van de techniek en het proces van etsen c.q. drypointen. U ziet de kunstwerken onder hun handen groeien en tot stand komen, onder toelichting van beide kunstenaars. In de galerie is ook een 1-daagse tentoonstelling met nieuwe werken van beide kunstenaars. 14:00 en 20:00.
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden’ in het Afrika Museum
Van 1 september t/m 31 oktober 2013 is in het Afrika Museum in Berg en Dal de bijzondere fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden: een reis langs de slavenhandel in Brazilië, Angola en Zeeland’ te zien. Fotograaf Hans van Rhoon en journalist Jeroen Junte maakten hiervoor afgelopen voorjaar een reis langs deze drie locaties, waar de oorsprong ligt van de Nederlandse slavenhandel. Met indringende foto’s en reportages hebben ze vastgelegd hoe 350 jaar later in Brazilië, Angola en Middelburg verdeeld wordt omgegaan met een gedeeld verleden.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
promotie: Christologie en Kwaad in Ghana
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 11:45
Titel: Christology and Evil in Ghana. Towards a Pentecostal Public Theology. By J. Quayesi-Amakye. In het proefschrift, Christology and Evil in Ghana: Towards a Pentecostal Public Theology, wordt de wijze waarop Ghanese pinkstergelovigen de Christelijke overwinning op het menselijk lijden en het kwaad interpreteren belicht. De studie van Joseph Quayesi-Amakye is een kritisch onderzoek naar wat in de Ghanese pinkster‐Christologie, vanuit de Bijbel en de Akan religie en cultuur, gezegd wordt over het probleem van het kwaad en het lijden enerzijds, het genieten van het goede leven anderzijds.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
ASC Film Seminar: Dangerous flowers with filmmaker Khamis (Cocoon initiative Kenya)
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 15:30
70 minute investigative documentary shot over seven years in Kenya and the Netherlands. It forms part of the Hivos campaign entitled Power of the Fair Trade Flower and takes the viewer through the Kenyan cut-flower industry to see the gender, environmental, cultural and health implications of this multi-million-euro sector. Khamis Ramadhan is a Kenyan photojournalist and filmmaker whose career has been dedicated almost entirely to human rights and cultural issues across Africa. Please register.
promotie: Verandering en framing van aantallen grote zoogdieren in Zimbabwe
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 16:00
"Het getallenspel in wildbeheer" - Verandering en framing van aantallen grote zoogdieren in Zimbabwe. Promovendus: Edson Gandiwa. Titel van de thesis: The Numbers Game in Wildlife Conservation. Changeability and framing of large mammal numbers in Zimbabwe. Promotor: prof.dr. HHT (Herbert) Prins
Leeskring Zuid-Afrikahuis: Die groen ghoen van PH Nortje
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 19:00
Gastheer deze avond is Rob van der Veer. Hij bespreekt dit jeugdboek uit 1967, over de avonturen van de geheime bende, de Spartaanse Ruiters en hun operatie Groen Ghoen. Aanmelden: 020-6249318 of bibliotheek@zuidafrikahuis.nl
zuidafrikahuis uitgeverijcossee
Tamikrest - desert blues
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 19:30
Tamikrest are a group of young Touareg musicians from the far north of Mali, where the parched landscape forms part of the Sahara desert. Their name means ‘the knot, junction or coalition’, a reference to the fact that the members hail from different regions, and ‘Adagh’ is another name for the Touareg, who are also referred to by their language, Tamashek.
Human Rights: What’s Your Argument? Deel 2: LHBT rechten
Dinsdag 29 Oktober 2013 20:00 - 22:00
Rechten van lesbiennes, homoseksuelen transgenders en biseksuelen. Traditionele waarden: een bedreiging of kans voor het beschermen van LHBT rechten in Afrika? Tijdens deze tweede debatavond in een serie van drie gaat Judith Kotzé, directeur van de Zuid-Afrikaanse organisatie Inclusive en Affirming Ministries, in gesprek met Aart Verburg, voormalig rector van het Hendrik Kraemer Instituut (HKI), een internationaal en intercultureel georiënteerd kenniscentrum van de Protestantse Kerk. Moderator is Petra Stienen.
The Mandingo Ambassadors - Music from Guinea
Woensdag 02 Oktober 2013 22:00
t/m Woensdag 30 Oktober 2013
This legendary band was formed in the late 1960's by guitarist Mamady "Djelike" Kouyate and singer Emile Soumah. They made some of the most beloved music of their generation. Now based in New York, Mamady Kouyate has decided to revive The Ambassadors. Every Wednesday night.
Woensdag 30 Oktober
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden’ in het Afrika Museum
Van 1 september t/m 31 oktober 2013 is in het Afrika Museum in Berg en Dal de bijzondere fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden: een reis langs de slavenhandel in Brazilië, Angola en Zeeland’ te zien. Fotograaf Hans van Rhoon en journalist Jeroen Junte maakten hiervoor afgelopen voorjaar een reis langs deze drie locaties, waar de oorsprong ligt van de Nederlandse slavenhandel. Met indringende foto’s en reportages hebben ze vastgelegd hoe 350 jaar later in Brazilië, Angola en Middelburg verdeeld wordt omgegaan met een gedeeld verleden.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
The Mandingo Ambassadors - Music from Guinea
Woensdag 02 Oktober 2013 22:00
t/m Woensdag 30 Oktober 2013
This legendary band was formed in the late 1960's by guitarist Mamady "Djelike" Kouyate and singer Emile Soumah. They made some of the most beloved music of their generation. Now based in New York, Mamady Kouyate has decided to revive The Ambassadors. Every Wednesday night.
Donderdag 31 Oktober
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden’ in het Afrika Museum
Van 1 september t/m 31 oktober 2013 is in het Afrika Museum in Berg en Dal de bijzondere fototentoonstelling ‘Verdeeld Verleden: een reis langs de slavenhandel in Brazilië, Angola en Zeeland’ te zien. Fotograaf Hans van Rhoon en journalist Jeroen Junte maakten hiervoor afgelopen voorjaar een reis langs deze drie locaties, waar de oorsprong ligt van de Nederlandse slavenhandel. Met indringende foto’s en reportages hebben ze vastgelegd hoe 350 jaar later in Brazilië, Angola en Middelburg verdeeld wordt omgegaan met een gedeeld verleden.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
Vrijdag 01 November
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Chambres des Canaux: The Tolerant Home
From 1 to 17 November 2013, the exhibition Chambres des Canaux: The Tolerant Home takes place at a number of special locations around the Amsterdam canals. Over this period, more than 15 artists who share a connection with the city will show their works in unique canal-side locations, including the official residence of the mayor and the Huis van Brienen. The exhibition is curated by Siebe Tettero and commissioned by Stichting Amsterdam 2013, celebrating 400 years since construction began on the Canal Ring. Participating artists includes South Africans as Marlene Dumas and Ina van Zyl.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
Eddy & The Ethiopians bij Mijke’s Middag Live
Vrijdag 01 November 2013 16:00
Elke week drie uur lang live soul & jazz waarbij publiek gratis welkom is, met huisband The Obsessions en live op Radio 6. Gasten deze week Eddy & The Ethiopians. Als een feniks is de Ethiopische muziek uit de jaren zestig en zeventig herrezen tot ver buiten de landsgrenzen. Zo ook de groep Eddy and the Ethiopians, waarin Daniel Tesfaye op krar (vijfsnarige lier, volgens de legende het instrument van Koning David) en Yimam Teddy op masenko (eensnarige luit) en tenorsax garant zullen staan voor hoogwaardig Ethiopisch muzikaal bloed.
Zaterdag 02 November
Africa in Motion - Scotland African Film Festival
8th edition of this festival. In Edinburgh & Glasgow. Awe-inspiring films from across the African continent. The festival theme for 2013 is Twende: Africa on the Move (“twende” is a Swahili word which translates as “let’s go!”), capturing Africa’s diverse richness and beauty through movement. Using this overarching theme there is a programme that encapsulates all types of movement.
Afrikadag 2013
Het is weer zover! De jaarlijkse Afrikadag komt er weer aan! Dé dag voor politiek en maatschappelijk debat over internationale samenwerking. Boeiende speeches van internationale gasten en bekende Nederlandse kopstukken, debatten, workshops en optredens van Afrikaanse artiesten maken het een dag om niet te missen. Een initiatief van de Foundation Max van der Stoel, in 2013 ontstaan door een fusie van de Alfred Mozer Stichting en de Evert Vermeer Stichting.
Body Parts - Jared Ginsburg
Ginsburg's latest series of works is an experiment in figuration and the conversation between pattern, drawing and object. Odd, erotic ink monoprints and carbon copy drawings are developed into outsized sculptures of body parts, manufactured from pieces of canvas that are stitched together and stuffed. These soft body parts trigger more drawing, so that the process is an endless movement from drawing to object and back again. Offcuts from the sculptures in turn form large-scale abstract compositions on canvas.
Camouflage - Francki Burger. Sethembile Msezane, Hentie van der Merwe. Reney Warrington
Brings together works by four photographic artists where camouflage serves as the binding theme. In a literal sense camouflage indicates the combination of colours, materials or illumination in order to conceal humans, animals or objects, or to disguise them as something else. We often associate this phenomenon with images of animals miraculously vanishing in front of our eyes, due to the perfect visual synchronicity between their own outer appearance and that of their immediate environments.
Chambres des Canaux: The Tolerant Home
From 1 to 17 November 2013, the exhibition Chambres des Canaux: The Tolerant Home takes place at a number of special locations around the Amsterdam canals. Over this period, more than 15 artists who share a connection with the city will show their works in unique canal-side locations, including the official residence of the mayor and the Huis van Brienen. The exhibition is curated by Siebe Tettero and commissioned by Stichting Amsterdam 2013, celebrating 400 years since construction began on the Canal Ring. Participating artists includes South Africans as Marlene Dumas and Ina van Zyl.
Christina De Middel 'The Afronauts'
Als uitgangspunt voor haar project The Afronauts, koos Cristina De Middel (1975, Spanje) een klein onderwerp uit de geschiedenis van Zambia. Een ruimtevaartprogramma gestart door een onderwijzer waardoor Zambia mee zou doen aan de internationale ruimtewedloop. Door gebrek aan financiële hulp was het initiatief echter gedoemd te mislukken. 50 jaar na dato reconstrueert De Middel dit verhaal, resulterend in de publicatie The Afronauts en de gelijknamige tentoonstelling; fantasie- en kleurrijke beelden vol humor, met prachtige zelf gecreëerde rekwisieten.
Chéri Samba - exhibition
Samba’s paintings reveal his perception of the social, political, economic and cultural realities of Zaïre, exposing all facets of everyday life in Kinshasa. His canvases offer a running commentary on popular customs, sexuality, AIDS and other illnesses, social inequalities, and corruption. From the late 1980s on, he himself became the main subject of his paintings. For Samba, this is not an act of narcissism; rather, like an anchor on TV news broadcasts, he places himself in his work to report on what it means to be a successful African artist on the world stage.
Devearts meaning: Africa
Tijdens deze expositie wordt het werk van talentvolle kunstenaars uit Egypte, Kenia, Mozambique, Nigeria, Oeganda en Rwanda getoond en de functie en de betekenis van hedendaagse kunst in deze Afrikaanse landen geëxploreerd. Welke rol spelen de kunstenaars en hedendaagse kunst in deze samenlevingen? In hoeverre blijkt de kunst universeel dan wel geografisch verbonden te zijn? Tijdens de tentoonstelling worden diverse activiiteiten georganiseerd, zie de site van Devearts voor meer informatie.
Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa
First major exhibition to examine the conceptually complex and visually rich relationship between African artists and the land upon which they live, walk, and frame their days. Approximately 100 artworks are on view in five thematic sections. For the first time, five artists create land-art installations in the Smithsonian gardens. Drawing upon a rich literature related to Earth shrines and religious organizations, this exhibition also contributes new and ground-breaking research on contemporary earthworks in Africa.
Elegies to the Slender Scrub - paintings by Helmut Starcke
About a hundred metres from artist Helmut Starcke’s home in the seaside hamlet of Betty’s Bay is the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden. It is cocooned in the heart of the Cape Fynbos region. Fynbos frames Starcke’s house. Seamless fields of scrub – in yellow, lilac, gold and green – snake along the scenic ocean, with around 1 600 plant species, the fynbos appears ubiquitously spread across the region, displaying an enormous floral diversity. It makes sense therefore that fynbos, or ‘slender scrub’ as it is translated, literally, from Dutch, should comprise the principal iconography of Starcke’s current body of works.
Harvest of Thorns - Kudzanai Chiurai (exhibition)
A culmination of Chiurai’s projects around public acts of violence as documented and represented by the media. The exhibition interrogates a contemporary African notion of sacrifice, though not enquiring into its necessity. Violence and sacrifice are evidenced through Chiurai’s use of sheepskin, bandages, wood, blood-red beads and bronzed horns. Chiurai alludes to ritual practices of war, cleansing and burial.
Ifeoma Anyaeji - Transmogrification (exhibition)
Ifeoma Anyaeji’s recent sculpture employs a virtuosic ability to create elegant forms drawn from architecture and domestic furniture design through the reconstruction of found objects such as the ubiquitous plastic bags and bottles. She utilizes a process that is physically and conceptually steeped in memory, history and the passage of time to create work that radically puts into question conventional notions of what sculpture is.
Inside Out - Tei Huagie (exhibition)
In his own words, Tei Huagie,”… a painter, sculpture, furniture and fashion designer”. A true artist whose works - paintings, sculpture,furniture and fashion - will launch the opening of the gallery space at Nubuke Foundation.
Josiah Onemu - Beelden van een bruggenbouwer
Beeldhouwer en kunstenaar Josiah Onodome Onemu (1945) is afkomstig uit Nigeria. Hij woont en werkt al tientallen jaren in Nederland. Deze expositie toont een overzicht van zijn brede oeuvre, waarvan een deel in beheer is van het Afrika Museum en een deel bestaat uit de privé-collectie van de kunstenaar. Vruchtbaarheid, het samenspel van tegendelen, lijden en wanhoop, hoop en beloftes, verandering en afscheid – de grote thema’s van het leven worden in het werk van Josiah Onemu nu eens sober, tot de essentie gereduceerd, dan weer verhalend in beeld gebracht. Hoe verschillend de uitwerking ook kan zijn, het onderwerp heeft altijd betrekking op mens en maatschappij.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Kin - photographs by Pieter Hugo
Over the past eight years Hugo has turned his eye on cramped townships, contested farmlands and abandoned mining areas; psychologically charged still lifes in people's homes; sites of political significance; drifters and the homeless; his pregnant wife, and his daughter moments after her birth; the domestic servants who have worked for the Hugo family over three generations. The series alternates between intimate and public spaces, with particular emphasis on the growing disparity between rich and poor, and reveals Hugo's deeply conflicted feelings about his home. Both Cape Town and Johannesburg, dates differ.
Lines, Marks, and Drawings: Through the Lens of Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen (b. 1950) has been shooting black-and-white film for nearly a half-century. A New York native, he has lived in South Africa for more than thirty years. Ballen's photographs of rural Afrikaners in their homes and urban-based "outsiders" in windowless rooms quickly became distinguished for their interior arrangements and the events that transpired among the people, animals, and furnishings within. Ballen's interest in line-whether of coat hangers, electric wire, or marks made on walls-has been constant.
Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
A multi-media traveling contemporary art exhibition that utilizes works by world-class artists to promote awareness of the root causes of violence against women; create empathy for women’s stories; foster a dialogue about the pervasiveness of violence against women; and inspire the belief that women and girls can be empowered with new behavioral choices. Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb.
Opening ‘Plato’s Cave’: The Legacy of Kevin Atkinson (1939-2007)
A protean and controversial artistic personality between the 1960s and the 1990s, Kevin Atkinson embraced a multiplicity of approaches to making art and made a deep impression on generations of students at UCT. This exhibition, drawn from the Atkinson’s underground studio named ‘Plato’s Cave’, is both a posthumous tribute and an attempt to come to a greater understanding of the impressive contribution that he made to South African art, both as an artist and an educator.
Prints made visible
SBK Amsterdam KNSM organiseert in het kader van de Maand van de Grafiek (G13) de groepsexpositie Prints made visible, met werk van kunstenaars die autonoom gebruik maken van grafische technieken en daarnaast een selectie van grafisch werk uit de rijke collectie van SBK. De nadruk ligt op de verscheidenheid van grafische discipline. Binnen dit raamwerk presenteert Galerie 23 werken van Meschac Gaba, Remy Jungerman, Admire Kamudzengerere, Abe Mathabe, Lucas Nkgweng en Victor Ekpuk. Hun werk wordt gecombineerd met dat van Rob Voerman, Harald Vlugt, Annesas Appel, Elma Oosterhoff en Carola Rombouts.
War & Peace - from Dakar to Amsterdam
3 Nederlandse en 4 Senegalese dansers met een hiphop achtergrond dansen alsof hun leven ervan afhangt. Behalve de gemeenschappelijke liefde voor de dans, inspireren de makers en dansers zich op hun directe omgeving, op de pijnlijke maar ook mooie contrasten tussen het leven van een hiphop danser in Dakar en in Amsterdam. Een coproductie van het Nederlandse danstheater Don’t Hit Mama van choreografe Nita Liem en dramaturg Bart Deuss en het Senegalese Ecole des Sables, opgezet door de internationaal befaamde Germaine Acogny-Vogt.
West to West: Owusu-Ankomah & Friends
Owusu-Ankomah (Sekondi, Ghana, 1956) is one of the best known representatives of contemporary African art. At the age of 15 he started his studies at the Ghanatta College of Art in Acra. In 1986 he moved to Bremen, where he has lived and worked for 27 years now. His lage-format and vividly colored works depict a spiritual world occupied by people and symbols. Owusu-Ankomah equally finds his inspiration in Renaissance artist Michelangelo and in the philosophy of his own Akan-speaking peoples of Ghana.
Zanele Muholi at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery
Selected works of South African photographer and LGBTQI activist Zanele Muholi will be exhibited at the Prince Claus Fund. Muholi herself will be present at the opening on 6 September. Zanele Muholi is a South African photographer and LGBTQI activist. Her work often focuses on black lesbians in South Africa as she seeks to postively represent her community in the midst of news stories of the 'curative rapes' and murders that plague the South African queer community. Among the selection of works to be shown at the Prince Claus Fund Gallery are Faces and Phases, Crime Scenes, the documentary Difficult Love.
Zarafa - jeugdfilm
Prachtig vormgegeven en elegant vertelde animatie gebaseerd op het waargebeurde verhaal over de eerste giraffe die in 1827 naar Parijs kwam en voor een rage zorgde in de lokale dierentuin. De kleine Maki ontsnapt aan een Franse slavenhandelaar en beleeft vele avonturen voordat hij zijn belofte kan inlossen om de giraffe Zarafa terug te brengen naar Afrika. Zonder een moment opdringerig te zijn biedt Zarafa naast stilistisch meesterschap en Maki's spannende avontuur ook een blik op Frankrijks gewelddadige verleden en de koninklijke freakshow die toen de boel bestuurde.
ASC Exhibition - African barbershop boards
Dinsdag 01 Oktober 2013 15:30
t/m Dinsdag 24 December 2013
A selection of African barbershop boards from Mali, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon and Zaïre. These non-verbal brightly coloured messages were collected over the last forty years by Esger Duintjer in Africa’s big cities, where they are hand-painted using industrial paints and lacquers on walls, hardboard, plywood, metal sheets and used canvas flour bags. Most of the craftsmen are autodidactic and anonymous although some are known by their chosen artist's name or the name of their collective workshop.
Afrikaans Maanlicht - dansen op Afrikaanse muziek
Zaterdag 02 November 2013 21:30
Bij gebrek aan elektriciteit vieren Afrikanen feest in het maanlicht! Gezellig dansen op vrolijke muziek uit alle windstreken van Afrika