Make art, like love Interview with Kendell Geers

Similar documents
COMPARATIVE STUDY: GHADA AMER & LAUREN MARIE NITKA

STAN DOUGLAS: PHOTOGRAPHS

Cutz: Black Men in Focus by Gracie Xavier. On View October 2-30, 2015 Gallery CA Baltimore, MD. Refocusing The Lens

MORTIMER-HAYS BRANDEIS TRAVELING FELLOWSHIP MUTED CONVERSATIONS VISUAL EXPLORATION OF SPIRITUALITY IN VIETNAM

Lawrence Weiner WHEREWITHAL WAS ES BRAUCHT

Volume 2 Claressinka Anderson Photos by Joe Pugliese

Maja Bajevic / Marcelle Marcel curated by Ami Barak

Laura Aguilar s Fearless East Coast Premiere at the Frost Art Museum FIU through May 27

Tarik Kiswanson on the Forgotten Age of Childhood

How Lorraine O'Grady Transformed Harlem Into a Living Artwork in the '80s and Why It Couldn't Be Done Today

In Memory of John Irwin*

Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, University of Toronto:

Haydenville Congregational Church The Rev. Dr. Andrea Ayvazian January 13, 2013 Isaiah 43:1-7

Interpreting the Human Condition

The Monstrous A Solo Exhibition by Seungae Lee

The Professional Photo, Film, TV & Personal Stylist s Course. Image Consulting

Mali Twist. 18th January André Magnin s curated celebration of Malick Sidibé

Nir Arieli Captures Top Contemporary Dance Companies as They Collapse Together

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: CONTACT: Mike Holmes

Welcome to the team! TOGETHER, WE WILL TURN MOTIVATED GIRLS INTO UNSTOPPABLE WOMEN.

Michael Landy s Basel Moment

HART HOUSE, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

Teacher Resource Packet Yinka Shonibare MBE June 26 September 20, 2009

Janet Biggs and Regina José Galindo: Endurance

Marta Klonowska lorch+seidel contemporary

little treasures 2019

Document A: The Daily Express

Prince Of Thieves: A Novel By Chuck Hogan

Jeffrey Gibson has long felt like an outsider. Born in Colorado Springs, Colo., in

If I told you the truth I d be lying. Stephen Rosin 13 October to 4 November 2011

Great Book Of Tattoo Designs, Revised Edition: More Than 500 Body Art Designs PDF

Press Release. Hanover, May 17, Opening: May 25, 2018, 8:00 pm Press Conference: May 23, 2018, 12:30 am

Exhibition Overview. Kazuo Ishiguro Never Let Me Go Vintage Books, 2006, p. 287

Interview with Michele Drascek curator of Neue slowenische Kunst (New Slovenian Space..

EXHIBITION GUIDE. Willem de Rooij. Friday 21 November 2014 Sunday 8 February 2015

Up and Coming: Sol Calero Turns Studio Voltaire into a Kitsch-ified Caribbean Classroom

Chinese Dissident Artist Ai Weiwei Hits A...

Erica Deeman's Silhouettes Tackle Race, Gender and Cultural Identity

The Professional Photo, Film, TV & Personal Stylist s Course. Film & TV Styling

Oral history interview with Cliff Joseph, 1972

Are you a Christian? Do you have a tattoo? Do you want a tattoo?

The Professional Photo, Film, TV & Personal Stylist s Course. Food Styling

Blurred Boundaries: Fashion as an Art

Sabba Syal Elahi Interview (2 of 2)

A Teachers Guide to: Silke Otto-Knapp Monday or Tuesday. Nina Canell Near Here. 17 January 30 March 2014

SEARCH SURFACEMAG.COM. SUBSCRIBE Get Surface today and save 48% off the cover price. 8/15/12 10:29 AM

Feminist Avant-Garde Of The 1970s, The Photographers Gallery Galvanising

THE ART OF PUNK: EMBROIDERY ARTIST, JUNKO OKI, FINALLY RELEASES HER LONG AWAITED ART BOOK

Discover Your Personality Develop as a Leader!

The Least Understood Beauty In The World Next To The Empire of Flower

Candice Breitz Mohau Modisakeng

In the advertisement world, the first thing that catches a costumer s eye apart from the product, is

From the Personal to the Political, 19 Artists to Watch Next Year By Holland Cotter December 27, 2017

Interview: Mads Lynnerup

BLOG Light Art's Heavy-Hitters Combine Forces for "Bright Matter"

Stephen J. Kaltenbach: TIME CAPSULES (1967 present)

THE MERMAID PROJECT. by Marta Jovanovic

A.FALKNER SOWAT J. KOLATA OCTOBER ART-ÉLYSÉES SECTION 8 th AVENUE Stand 511E - Champs - Élysées OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 11

In fact, what does identity even mean in relation to the truths, half-truths, non-truths that exist in the form of electronic memory?

ART SPACE PYTHAGORION NEVIN ALADAĞ BORDERLINE

Photographer Chronicles The Glamorous Hairstyles Of West Africa s Beauty Salons

GAVIN TURK. 5 April June Burnt Out

The Oneness of an Endless Universe A Conversation with

Additional Resources: Ethical Consumerism

DIRECTOR APPLICATION The Fashion Show Director/Committee Roles and Responsibilities

Robert Indiana (1928- )

Bleeds. Linda L. Richards. if it bleeds. A Nicole Charles Mystery. Richards has a winning way with character. richards

RODAN KANE HART STRUCTURE January 2013

Mika Rottenberg

Julio LE PARC Modern Painters

Paris Sultana Gallery: small space to focus on the Art Fair

FIRST FLOOR GALLERY HARARE WOMAN-MIRIRO MWANDIMBIRA

EXTRAORDINARY CHOREOGRAPHER: SIFISO SELEME PERFORMER: SIFISO SELEME SET AND CONSUME: AFRICANISM 13

Tokyo Nude, 1990 Kishin Shinoyama

GIACOMETTI AND MAEGHT

SHERRIE LEVINE AFRICAN MASKS AFTER WALKER EVANS 9 JUNE 25 JULY 2015 PRIVATE VIEW: MONDAY, 8 JUNE, 6 8 PM

LAURENT MONTARON. Exhibition from 24 november 2016 to 12 january 2017 opening thursday 24 november 2016, from 6pm

A Lens On Resistance

Willie Cole. beta pictoris gallery / Maus Contemporary ARCO Madrid 2016 Stand 9D11!2

Awol Erizku: This Los Angeles Artist Is Throwing Out All The Rules


Blair Bear Tracks Factual. Informative. Entertaining. Student Journalism.

First published in Australian Art Collector, Issue 42 October-December Afraid of the dark

David Goldblatt, Acclaimed South African Photographer, Dies at 87

Jean-Michel Othoniel Solo Exhibition Black Lotus

art basel june 14-18, 2018 unlimited sector booth U69

The localization of global tattoo culture as a form of youth culture among female university students in Cape Town

FACT SHEET. Spirit into Matter: The Photographs of Edmund Teske June 15 September 26, 2004, at the Getty Center

REGARDING ANA RoseLee Goldberg

Rosalind Nashashibi, Bachelor Machines Part 2, 2007

This video installation Boundary is a metaphor for how it felt to be raised in a

Gustav Met zger - Exhibition checklist

The Artist Jimmie Durham: A Long Time Gone, but Welcomed Back

Born in Belgium in 1941, Harry

Native American Artist-in-Residence Program

Betye Saar: Selected Works Fine Arts Gallery, California State University, Los Angeles, CA, September 29 - October 2, 1973

Step up to Sensé Skin-Care Latest Additions

Mathieu K. Abonnenc Presse

Mary Lucier: The Plains of Sweet Regret

Transcription:

Vol. 1 October 2014 October 2014, Interviews Make art, like love Interview with Kendell Geers By Anna Savitskaya Fri, Oct 17, 2014 Broken glass and barbed wire always play a major role in describing Kendell Geers' attitude to what is going on in the world. The range of media used is very diverse: sculpture, installation, painting, photography, and drawing. Kendell Geers has exhibited globally and took part in a number of events: Documenta, Taipei Biennial, Lyon Biennial, Glasstress at the Venice Biennial to name a few. He also had solo shows in Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst in Gent, Palais de Tokyo, Haus der Kunst in Munich etc. Make art, like love from Manifesto written by Kendell Geers in 2011 Kendell Geers was born in Johannesburg during the time of apartheid. When turned 15, Kendell ran away from home in order to get involved into the antiapartheid movement. After finishing school Kendell enrolled at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg for a Fine Arts degree. To avoid imprisonment he had to leave South Africa in 1989 and lived for a short period in exile in the United Kingdom and New York where he worked as an assistant to artist Richard Prince. After coming back to South Africa in 1990 Kendell stays there till 2000 and then he moves to Brussels. The period

between 1988 and 2000 is considered to be very fruitful in Kendell s career, full of harsh political context in his work. Broken glass and barbed wire always play a major role in describing his attitude to what is going on in the world. The range of media used is also diverse: sculpture, installation, painting, photography, and drawing. In 2011 Kendell Geers wrote a Manifesto, where with a series of statements he shares his attitude towards life, time, love, art. Kendell Geers has exhibited globally and took part in a number of events: Documenta, Taipei Biennial, Lyon Biennial, Glasstress at the Venice Biennial to name a few. He also had solo shows in Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst in Gent, Palais de Tokyo, Haus der Kunst in Munich etc.

Numb Skull, 2007, White neon skull, Photo: A.Morin, Courtesy: the artist Artdependence Magazine: Your works can be interpreted as a political statement against terror and suppression made through art. What does

art mean to you? Is it, in the first place, your asylum, way of expression or a protest form, means to bring a message? Kendell Geers: I believe that the strength of art lies in its ability to transcend logic through contradiction. If it is fully embodied, art could never be subject to a for or against reading for it is always simultaneously both creative and destructive. My work does not judge the spirit of the world I live in, but embodies it instead. Art is certainly a sign of hope for it permits the imagination to wander where it cannot in reality. If there be protest in my art, it is in the form of celebrating life and affirming spirit. AD: In 1985, to avoid conscription, you enrolled at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg for a Fine Arts degree. Was it a spontaneous action or you were already interested in art (and if so, how did it start?). KG: It was absolutely a spontaneous protest against the socio-political condition I found myself in at the time. I literally enrolled myself into art in order to not go to jail for six years as punishment for refusing to serve in the Apartheid military. The conditions of enrolling at Wits University at the time dictated that I give a second choice and I felt that to be in contradiction with my right to choose so I decided to follow the irrational illogical option, the second choice, in celebration of my refusal to enter the rationalism of military conscription. Until that day I had never so much as opened a book about art before, much less even drawn an apple.

Ligne de Fuite 08407, 2014, Acrylic on canvas Courtesy: Stephen Friedman Gallery, London AD: How did you trip to the USA influence you when you escaped there at the age of 21? Did apprenticeship with American artist Richard Price change your vision in general and of art in particular? KG: I lost faith in what seemed so compelling from a distance. I realized that so called post modernism was tagged on by the critics after the fact. I understood that art was a system, already rotten to its core and that what I had perceived to be history was little more than circumstance. The eggshells of my perception were broken and it was time to start making omelets.

Manifest, 2007, Blue neon (What Do You Believe In?), Photo: A.Morin, Courtesy: the artist AD: In 1990 after Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners' were released from prison, you finally returned from your exile to Johannesburg where you worked as an artist, curator and art critic. Why did you go back to South Africa? Did you ever think of staying in the USA and working as an artist there?

KG: I always saw myself as part of the Anti-Apartheid movement so with the release of Nelson Mandela I saw it as a duty to return to South Africa to be part of the new democracy. I returned to South Africa, inspired to build a better future. AD: Please tell us about your self portrait (1995). How do you see yourself in it? KG: I can talk about this broken bottle "self portrait" for hours! Many people think that I chose Heineken because I actually like beer and more than that, drink Heineken and I have to correct them. Identity is very complex, especially if you are a White African and self-loathing is part of your cultural inheritance. In 1990, when Mandela was released and Apartheid delegislated, our identity as South Africans was up for grabs. Our history, culture, morality, faith, values and everything that one might normally take for granted, as identity was in my case illegitimate. As an African I consider myself an animist and respect my ancestors, but those ancestors are Dutch. The broken bottle of beer speaks of identity as violence, the self as broken, the spirit the bottle once contained has been drunk and all that remains is the garbage of history.

Self Portrait, 1995, Found Object, Courtesy: the artist AD: In 2011 you wrote a political-erotical-mythical manifest, where you state your basic life principles. How did this idea come up to you? Is there any main principle you follow throughout your life? KG: I found myself in a deep depression at the time brought about by the injustices of an art system that cares only about market ranking and price tags. The art system has no use or value for vision, integrity or consequence. I decided to mark time by writing down my thoughts about art. I know that my thoughts then were very different than they were in 1988 when I began and almost certainly would be different again from what they might be in 2022. I decided to take the courage to admit what I am thinking and express what I believe art might be in a time when most artists are terrified of being caught with their pants down. The manifest is true and correct only for that moment of writing, but the thoughts expressed flow from somewhere and are on their way to somewhere else as everything in life is interconnected. Full Manifest is here. AD: Is recognition important to you? KG: Much more important than recognition is the desire for respect. AD: Are there any political events now happening in the world, that you would like to refer to in your work? KG: The planet is in meltdown and if we do not slow down and pull back from the precipice we are all going to drive our species into extinction. I don t care for politics today because every politician seems to have a price. How can we speak about politics when corporations have bank balances that are the double of the United States? How can we speak about politics when the politicians allow fracking and tolerate the accelerated destruction of nature? How can we respect politicians who use fear as an operating system to dumb their constituencies down into docile consumers? AD: Thank you, Kendell! More information about the work of Kendell Geers can be found here. By Anna Savitskaya