Showing posts with label Sharjah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharjah. Show all posts

10/12/23

Gavin Jantjes @ Al Mureijah Art Spaces, Sharjah - "To Be Free! A Retrospective 1970–2023" - Presented by Sharjah Art Foundation and The Africa Institute - Curated by Salah M. Hassan

Gavin Jantjes 
To Be Free! A Retrospective 1970–2023
Al Mureijah Art Spaces, Sharjah
18 November 2023 - 10 March 2024

Gavin Jantjes
GAVIN JANTJES 
Untitled, 1989. From ‘Zulu’, c.1984–1990 
Arts Council Collection, London 
Image courtesy of the artist and Arts Council

Sharjah Art Foundation and The Africa Institute present the first retrospective of acclaimed South African artist and activist GAVIN JANTJES. Featuring over 100 works from 1970 to the present,  Gavin Jantjes: To Be Free! A Retrospective 1970–2023 underscores pivotal phases in the artist’s life and career over the last 50 years. The exhibition includes his early work in printmaking, painting and anti-apartheid activism; his transformative role at art institutions in the UK, Germany and Norway; his figurative portrayals of the global Black struggle for freedom; and his recent transition to non-figurative painting. The exhibition also debuts a new series of large-scale paintings that Gavin Jantjes created during his 2022 residency at Sharjah Art Foundation. The exhibition is on view at Galleries 4, 5 and 6 in Al Mureijah Art Spaces.
‘Gavin’s prolific career in artistry and activism draws connections between freedom movements in Africa and around the world. This long-overdue retrospective spotlights the work that he has done for decades to help preserve histories threatened by erasure, shed light on the effects of colonisation and protect freedom of expression,’ says exhibition curator Salah M. Hassan, Director of The Africa Institute. ‘It is especially exciting to premiere this exhibition in Sharjah, where Gavin’s recent residency at Sharjah Art Foundation cultivated exciting new work that builds on his recent explorations in non-figurative painting.’
He spent his formative years under apartheid in Cape Town, from where he was exiled at the age of 22 for his work as an artist and activist. Gavin Jantjes has long pursued a quest for artistic emancipation free from Eurocentric perspectives and expectations. His cross-disciplinary practice incorporates printmaking, sculpting, writing and most frequently painting, employing a wide range of motifs and palettes to engage with histories of slavery, civil rights movements and post-colonial freedom struggles around the world. Currently based in the UK, Gavin Jantjes is regarded as one of South Africa’s most important artists and is internationally recognised for his work as a human rights activist.

Providing a framework through which viewers can examine the system of apartheid and its contemporary legacies, To Be Free! encompasses each aspect of Gavin Jantjes’ polymath career—his curatorial initiatives, writings and wider role as an advocate for social liberation. Organised in chapters that mark significant moments in Gavin Jantjes’ life and unfurl various threads of his practice, the exhibition brings together more than 100 prints, drawings, paintings and film works as well as an extensive collection of archival material such as books, photographs, newspaper clippings and videos from the past five decades. The final chapter presents his most recent non-figurative series ‘Sharjah.’ These paintings, some of his largest to date, conjure ethereal realms that provoke self-reflection and leave viewers free to draw their own interpretations.

ABOUT GAVIN JANTJES
Activist, painter, printmaker, curator and writer Gavin Jantjes was born in Cape Town just as the apartheid regime in South Africa was beginning its ascent. Drawing on personal experience, he explores the role of art in furthering human rights, freedom of expression and cultural understanding. He has exhibited internationally, and his works can be found in the collections of the South African National Gallery, Cape Town; Tate, London; and Museum of Modern Art, New York. He has received commissions from the United Nations Refugee Council and the UN Commission on Apartheid. He has lectured at Chelsea College of Arts in London and served as artistic director for the Henie Onstad Art Center, Norway (1998–2004), and senior curator for the National Museum, Oslo (2004–2014). His many books include A Fruitful Incoherence (Iniva, 1998) and the four-volume Visual Century: South African Art in Context 1907–2007 (Wits University Press, 2010). He lives and works in Oxfordshire.

ABOUT THE CURATOR SALAH M. HASSAN
Salah M. Hassan is the Director of The Africa Institute, Sharjah, and Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences in Africana, Cornell University, USA. He is an art historian, curator and art critic and founding editor of Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art (Duke University Press).

AL MUREIJAH ART SPACES
Sharjah Art Foundation
Al Mureijah Square, Sharjah

23/01/23

Sharjah Biennial 15: Thinking Historically in the Present

Sharjah Biennial 15
Thinking Historically in the Present
7 February - 11 June 2023

Pipo Nguyen-Duy
Pipo Nguyen-Duy
Courtesy of the artist

Yinka Shonibare
Yinka Shonibare
Courtesy of the artist

Kahurangiariki Smith
Kahurangiariki Smith
Courtesy of the artist

Nusra Latif Qureshi
Nusra Latif Qureshi
Courtesy of the artist

Archana Hande
Archana Hande
Courtesy of the artist

Sharjah Art Foundation (SAF) brings together over 150 artists and collectives from more than 70 countries for the 15th edition and 30-year anniversary of the Sharjah Biennial. Conceived by the late Okwui Enwezor and curated by the Foundation’s Director Hoor Al Qasimi, Sharjah Biennial 15: Thinking Historically in the Present reflects on Enwezor’s visionary work, which transformed contemporary art and has influenced the evolution of institutions and biennials around the world, including the Sharjah Biennial.

Al Qasimi interprets and elaborates on Enwezor’s proposal with a presentation of more than 300 artworks—including 70 new works—critically centring the past within contemporary times. These works, as well as a wide-ranging programme of performance, music and film, activate more than 19 venues in 5 cities and towns across the emirate of Sharjah: Al Dhaid, Hamriyah, Kalba, Khorfakkan and Sharjah. Among the many venues are sites within Sharjah’s historical quarter; buildings recently restored and transformed by the Foundation including The Flying Saucer and Kalba Ice Factory; and repurposed structures that once served as a vegetable market, medical clinic and kindergarten. Free and open to the public, Sharjah Biennial 15 runs 7 February through 11 June 2023, with opening week events taking place from 7 February to 12 February.

“Two decades ago, I experienced Okwui’s Documenta 11 which, with its radical embrace of postcolonialism, transformed my curatorial perspective. His idea of ‘thinking historically in the present’ is the conceptual framework for the Biennial, which we’ve sought to honour and elaborate on while also reflecting on the Foundation’s own past, present and future as the Biennial marks its 30-year anniversary. We look forward to welcoming local audiences and visitors from around the world to reflect on the Biennial’s themes and the artists’ wide-ranging perspectives on nationhood, tradition, race, gender, body and imagination,” said Al Qasimi.

For Enwezor, the contemporary art exhibition provided a means to engage with history, politics and society in our global present. Enwezor’s proposition of the ‘postcolonial constellation’ and its pluriverse of key concepts form one point of departure for the 15th edition of the Sharjah Biennial. Re-envisioning the proposal by the late curator, Al Qasimi builds upon her own long-term relationship with the Biennial, as visitor, artist, curator, and eventually as director of the Foundation.

Pak Khawateen Painting Club
Pak Khawateen Painting Club
Courtesy of the artist

Carolina Caycedo
Carolina Caycedo
Courtesy of the artist

Inuuteq Storch
Inuuteq Storch
Courtesy of the artist

Pushpakanthan Pakkiyarajah
Pushpakanthan Pakkiyarajah
Courtesy of the artist

Lavanya Mani
Lavanya Mani
Courtesy of the artist

The 19 venues spread across the emirate of Sharjah—from heritage buildings and historical landmarks to modern architecture of the late 1900s and contemporary spaces—connect different moments of Sharjah’s history as well as its diverse communities and landscapes. Through more than 300 artworks, the Biennial proposes a transcultural universe of thought embedded into this local social fabric, involving Sharjah’s own lived past in a nuanced conversation around postcolonial subjectivity, the body as a repository of memories, restitution, racialization, transgenerational continuities, and decolonisation. Rooted in intimate and caring observations of everyday lives and vernacular traditions, performances, concerts, workshops and other public programmes will activate the venues as well as regional art centers located in each city, forming a capillary reach across the emirate throughout the four-month duration of the Biennial.

Expanding upon Enwezor’s initial proposal, Al Qasimi has collaborated with artists to embark on more than 70 new works, including many major commissions, that relate and respond to SB15’s overarching theme of centering the past within the present, thereby bridging diverse postcolonial histories.

Major new commissions by John Akomfrah, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Doris Salcedo, Berni Searle and Barbara Walker testify to the lingering after-effects of colonialism. A feature-length film by Coco Fusco, installation by Bouchra Khalili, multimedia work by Almagul Menlibayeva and sound installation by Hajra Waheed reactivate and reimagine the political conflicts precipitated by the modern nation-building process.

Brook Andrew and Isaac Julien reflect upon museumised objects and their restitution, while Destiny Deacon, Robyn Kahukiwa and Tahila Mintz assert the significance of indigenous identities and values. In the works of Gabrielle Goliath, Amar Kanwar, Wangechi Mutu and Carrie Mae Weems, individual histories are interwoven with collective notions of memory, grief and transformation.

Also premiering in SB15 are works that engage with the local context of Sharjah. Kerry James Marshall proposes an outdoor installation in the form of an archaeological find inspired by fact, myth and tales, while Lubaina Himid and Nil Yalter dive into the urban fabric of Sharjah with their public interventions. Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme, Asma Belhamar, Kambui Olujimi, Prajaka Potnis and Veronica Ryan present site-specific projects that converse with and recontextualise the old and new architecture of the Foundation.

Performances and theatrical presentations will be on offer throughout the Biennial. Gabriela Golder, Hassan Hajjaj, Rachid Hedli, Tania El Khoury, The Living and the Dead Ensemble and Aline Motta will activate their work during the opening week in February. In conjunction with the annual March Meeting, Marwah AlMugait, Shiraz Bayjoo, Naiza Khan and Akeim Toussaint Buck will perform in early March. Musical programmes featuring musicians Youssou N’Dour and Abdullah Ibrahim will follow in March and April, with additional performances to be announced later.

Amar Kanwar
Amar Kanwar
Courtesy of the artist

Angela Ponce
Angela Ponce
Courtesy of the artist

Semsar Siahaan
Semsar Siahaan 
Courtesy of the artist

Tahila Mintz
Tahila Mintz
Courtesy of the artist

SHARJAH BIENNIAL 15 PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme - Maitha Abdalla - Fathi Afifi - Hoda Afshar - John Akomfrah - Moza Almatrooshi - Marwah AlMugait - Hangama Amiri - Brook Andrew - Malala Andrialavidrazana - Rushdi Anwar - Kader Attia - Au Sow Yee - Dana Awartani - Omar Badsha - Natalie Ball - Sammy Baloji - Mirna Bamieh - Pablo Bartholomew and Richard Bartholomew - Shiraz Bayjoo - Bahar Behbahani - Asma Belhamar - Rebecca Belmore - Black Grace - Diedrick Brackens - Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons - Cao Fei - Carolina Caycedo - Ali Cherri, Wook-Kyung Choi - Maya Cozier - Iftikhar Dadi and Elizabeth Dadi - Solmaz Daryani - Annalee Davis and Yoeri Guépin - Destiny Deacon - Manthia Diawara - Imane Djamil - Anju Dodiya - Kimathi Donkor - Heri Dono - Rehab Eldalil - Ali Eyal - Marianne Fahmy - Brenda Fajardo - Raheleh Filsoofi - Nina Fischer and Maroan el Sani - Coco Fusco - Flavia Gandolfo - Theaster Gates - Malek Gnaoui and Ala Eddine Slim - Gabriela Golder - Gabrielle Goliath - Yulia Grigoryants - Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige - Hassan Hajjaj - David Hammons - Archana Hande - Fathi Hassan - Mona Hatoum - Rachid Hedli - Lubaina Himid - Laura Huertas Millán - Saodat Ismailova - Isaac Julien - Saddam Jumaily - Patricia Kaersenhout - Robyn Kahukuiwa - Reena Saini Kallat - Hanni Kamaly - Amar Kanwar - Adam Khalil and Bayley Sweitzer with Oba - Bouchra Khalili - Naiza Khan - Tania El Khoury - Kiluanji Kia Henda - Ayoung Kim - Emily Kame Kngwarreye - Hiroji Kubota - Remi Kuforiji - Lee Kai Chung - Faustin Linyekula - The Living and the Dead Ensemble - Ibrahim Mahama - Nabil El Makhloufi - Jawad Al Malhi - Waheeda Malullah - Maharani Mancanagara - mandla - Lavanya Mani - Kerry James Marshall - Queenie McKenzie - Steve McQueen - Marisol Mendez - Almagul Menlibayeva - Helina Metaferia - Kimowan Metchewais - Meleanna Meyer - Joiri Minaya - Tahila Mintz - Roméo Mivekannin - Tracey Moffat - Aline Motta - Wangechi Mutu - Eubena Nampitjin - Dala Nasser - New Red Order - Pipo Nguyen-Duy - Mame-Diarra Niang - Shelley Niro - Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi - Elia Nurvista - Kambui Olujimi - Zohra Opoku - Selma Ouissi and Sofiane Ouissi - Erkan Özgen - Pak Khawateen Painting Club - Pushpakanthan Pakkiyarajah - Hyesoo Park - Philippe Parreno - Angela Ponce - Prajakta Potnis - Anita Pouchard Serra - Jasbir Puar and Dima Srouji - Monira Al Qadiri - Farah Al Qasimi - Nusra Latif Qureshi - Michael Rakowitz - Umar Rashid - Wendy Red Star - Veronica Ryan - Doris Salcedo - Abdulrahim Salem - Sangeeta Sandrasegar - Varunika Saraf - Khadija Saye - Berni Searle - Mithu Sen - Nelly Sethna - Aziza Shadenova - Smita Sharma - Nilima Sheikh - Yinka Shonibare - Felix Shumba - Semsar Siahaan - Mary Sibande - Kahurangiariki Smith - Mounira Al Solh - Inuuteq Storch - Vivan Sundaram - Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum - Obaid Suroor - Hank Willis Thomas - Akeim Toussaint Buck - Hajra Waheed - Barbara Walker - Wang Jianwei - Nari Ward - Carrie Mae Weems - Nil Yalter

Working Group and Advisory Committee

Thinking Historically in the Present is being realised by Al Qasimi as curator with support from the Sharjah Biennial 15 Working Group, which also supported the development and realisation of March Meeting 2021 and 2022. The Working Group is comprised of Tarek Abou El Fetouh (Director of Performance and Senior Curator, Sharjah Art Foundation); Ute Meta Bauer (professor and Founding Director of NTU CCA Singapore); Salah M Hassan (professor and art historian, Cornell University and Director of The Africa Institute, Sharjah); Chika Okeke-Agulu (professor and art historian, Princeton University); and Octavio Zaya (independent curator, art writer and Executive Director of the Cuban Art Foundation). The Advisory Committee includes Sir David Adjaye (architect) and Christine Tohmé (Director, Ashkal Alwan, Beirut).

March Meeting 2023: The Postcolonial Constellation: Art, Culture, Politics after 1960

Coinciding with the Biennial, the Foundation presents its annual convening of artists, curators, scholars and arts practitioners from around the world to discuss vital issues in contemporary art. March Meeting 2023 will explore the global political, social and economic systemic and structural shifts that characterized the world since the 1960s by revisiting the histories of this period while examining concepts such as first nation and indigenous practices, creolization, hybridity and supranational formations, such as the Black Atlantic, diasporas, exile and statelessness, along with artistic, ideological and philosophical perspectives on decolonization.

March Meeting 2023 builds on the two previous March Meetings that served as a prelude to the Biennial and were similarly conceived in relationship to Enwezor’s conception of the “postcolonial constellation”: Unravelling the Present (March Meeting 2021) and The Afterlives of the Postcolonial (March Meeting 2022). Talks and panels from the 2021 and 2022 editions are available online at: sharjahart.org/march-meeting-2021/programme. The March Meeting Papers, a series of eleven commissioned essays by art historians and scholars chosen through the March Meeting 2021 open call, are also available online at: 
sharjahart.org/sharjah-art-foundation/publications/march-meeting-papers.

SHARJAH ART FOUNDATION