Showing posts with label William Kentridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Kentridge. Show all posts

04/05/25

William Kentridge @ Hauser & Wirth, NYC - "A Natural History of the Studio" Exhibition - Presentation of "Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot"

William Kentridge 
A Natural History of the Studio
Hauser & Wirth, New York
542 West 22nd Street & 443 West 18th Street
1 May - 1 August 2025

William Kentridge Portrait
William Kentridge
Still from Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot, 
Episode 1: A Natural History of the Studio, 2020 - 2024
HD Video, 24 min
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

William Kentridge
William Kentridge
Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot III, 2012
Hand-woven mohair tapestry
283 x 230 cm / 111 3/8 x 90 1/2 in
Photo: Thys Dullaart
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

With ‘A Natural History of the Studio,’ his first exhibition with Hauser & Wirth in New York, renowned South African artist WILLIAM KENTDRIDGE presents his acclaimed episodic film series ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee- Pot’ with more than seventy works on paper integral to its creation and an array of sculptures at 542 West 22nd Street. This immersive exhibition is the first ever to present all the drawings from this filmic masterpiece, hailed by critics as a moving, witty and ultimately wondrous synthesis of the personal and the political, the individual and the universal. Spanning two floors of the gallery’s 22nd Street building, ‘A Natural History of the Studio’ also extends to the gallery’s 18th Street location with a concise survey of Kentridge’s printmakingr practice. 

To mark this occasion, Hauser & Wirth Publishers will release a new artist’s book that condenses the essence of ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ through written dialogue and still images. 

William Kentridge Artwork
William Kentridge
Drawing for Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot (Waterfall), 2021
Charcoal, pastel and coloured pencil on paper
128 x 223 cm / 50 3/8 x 87 3/4 in
Photo: William Kentridge Studio
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

William Kentridge Artwork
William Kentridge
Drawing for Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot 
(I Look in the Mirror, I Know What I Need), 2020
Tempera paint, charcoal, pastel, coloured pencil, 
dry pigment and collage on paper
250 x 212 cm / 98 3/8 x 83 1/2 in
Photo: Thys Dullaart
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

William Kentridge Drawings
William Kentridge
Drawing for Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot 
(Set A of 16 drawings), 2020
Charcoal and coloured pencil on paper, 16 drawings
Each: 29 x 40 cm / 11 3/8 x 15 3/4 in approx.
Photo: Thys Dullaart
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

Conceived by the artist’s longtime collaborator Sabine Theunissen, the installation design for the first floor of ‘A Natural History of the Studio’ at 22nd Street includes the charcoal drawings used in the animation of ‘Self- Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ and evoke the feeling of being in Kentridge’s working environment with him, a place where the walls hum with inspiration and every surface tells a story. Shot in his Johannesburg studio at the outset of the global COVID-19 pandemic and completed in 2024, the series includes nine thirty-minute episodes that bring viewers inside the artist’s mind. Through a blend of Kentridge’s signature stop-motion technique, live action performance and philosophical dialogue, ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ delves into subjects like Greek mythology, the history of mining in Johannesburg, colonialism in Africa and Soviet absurdities. And here, as in his wider body of work, the seemingly mundane and familiar household coffee pot becomes a stand-in for the artist, an avatar of the art-making process in which a steady flow of ideas is akin to the bubbling of coffee brewing. In several episodes of the series, William Kentridge is joined by collaborators and assistants; in others he is seen debating and squabbling with a series of doppelgängers in a playful externalization of his internal creative struggles. Thus, ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ serves as both a celebration of creativity and a snapshot of Kentridge’s pandemic experience. 

The presentation at Hauser & Wirth follows special previews of ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ at the Toronto International Film Festival and BFI London Film Festival. The complete series of films was first seen in an installation curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev at the Arsenale Institute for Politics of Representation in Venice, in conjunction with the 2024 Venice Biennale.

‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ was created and directed by William Kentridge, executive produced by Rachel Chanoff and Noah Bashevkin of The Office Performing Arts + Film, Joslyn Barnes of Louverture Films and the William Kentridge Studio. Walter Murch supervised the editing by South African digital artist Janus Fouché and Kentridge’s regular collaborators Žana Marović and Joshua Trappler. 

William Kentridge Sculpture
William Kentridge
Carrier Pigeon, 2019
Bronze
92.2 x 50 x 95 cm / 36 1/4 x 19 5/8 x 37 3/8 in
Photo: Oriol Tarridas Photography
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

William Kentridge Sculptures
William Kentridge
Italics Plus, 2024
Bronze, 43 parts
Overall: 100 x 280 x 28.5 cm / 39 3/8 x 110 1/4 x 11 1/4 in
Photo: Anthea Pokroy
© William Kentridge
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Goodman Gallery

The second floor of the exhibition explores the relationship between drawing and sculpture in Kentridge’s oeuvre. Among works on view here is a selection of ‘Paper Procession’ sculptures. Made from aluminum panels fixed to a steel armature and hand-painted in vibrant oil paint, these works are based on a series of small-scale paper sculptures Kentridge made from pages of a 19th century accounting journal from the Chiesa di San Francesco Saverio in Palermo, Italy. The works feel like moving sketches—ephemeral yet powerful––and extend Kentridge’s exploration of history, memory and transformation using humble materials to challenge grand narratives. The presentation also includes Kentridge’s bronze ‘glyphs’ –– sculptures of both everyday and arcane objects, words and icons that function together as a sort of visual glossary that can be arranged and re-arranged to construct different sculptural ‘sentences.’ The glyphs began as ink drawings and paper cut-outs that subsequently were cast in bronze and finished with a pitch-black patina evoking the hue of both ink and shadows. These glyphs also make an appearance in the single channel animated video on view titled ‘Fugitive Words’ (2024). The film opens with an overhead view of Kentridge’s hands flipping through the pages of one his many notebooks––a vital part of his creative process and an extension of his studio––where sketches, scores, diagrams, lists and phrases appear. The scene quickly develops into a dreamlike, non-narrative journey through the artist’s mind, where fleeting words, shifting images and even his drawing tools come to life to create an evolving landscape of memory and transformation, all set to Beethoven’s ‘Archduke’ piano trio.

A World in Prints at 18th Street 

‘A Natural History of the Studio’ extends to Hauser & Wirth’s nearby 18th Street location with a selection of thirty prints made by Kentridge over the last two decades. The artist first began printmaking while a student at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and the medium has been integral to his practice ever since. Kentridge has experimented with a broad range of techniques in this realm, from etching to lithography, aquatint, drypoint, photogravure and woodcut, observing that, ‘Printmaking…became a medium in which I could think, not merely a medium to make a picture... it has not been an adjunct to my other activities, but in many ways, it has been a central thread that has gone through the work I have done in the studio over the last 40 years.’ 

Many of the works on view at 18th Street revisit familiar personal iconography or directly reference other milestone projects, including the films on view at 22nd Street. The image of a typewriter, for example, dominates four print variations on view and is used as a metaphor for communication, historical record-keeping, and bureaucratic authority. Produced with master printmaker Mark Attwood in 2012 and given such titles as ‘The Full Stop Swallows the Sentence’ and ‘Undo Unsay,’ these works on paper are directly connected to Kentridge’s film ‘The Refusal of Time’ (2012), a thirty-minute meditation on time and space, the complex legacies of colonialism and industry, and the artist’s own intellectual life. 

A series of lithographs titled ‘Portraits for Shostakovich’ (2022) was inspired by a 52-minute film made to accompany live performance of Dmitri Shostakovich’s Symphony No.10. Titled ‘Oh To Believe in Another World’ (2022), that project also serves as the subject of episode 8 of ‘Self-Portrait of a Coffee-Pot.’ These colorful prints feature fractured portraits of Soviet intellectuals, members of the cultural avant-garde like the playwright and poet Mayakovsky, and politicians such as Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin. 

The presentation at 18th Street also includes four self-portraits. Made in collaboration with Jillian Ross Print in 2023, these works employ photogravure, drypoint, and hand-painting techniques with collaged elements of photographs, drawings, and fragments of text – an approach that in its insistent layering evokes the construction of self and identity as a continual work in process, intertwined with and shaped by socio-political forces. 

HAUSER & WIRTH
542 West 22nd Street & 443 West 18th Street, New York City

06/03/25

Hauser & Wirth @ LOPF 2025 - London Original Print Fair - New releases, modern and contemporary highlights - Artists + Artworks

Hauser & Wirth @ Booth S9
London Original Print Fair 2025
20 — 23 March 2025

Thomas J Price Artwork
Thomas J Price
 
Rood Boy (Untitled 2), 2024
Aluminum, 24ct gold leaf, walnut, acrylic
Ed. of 10 + 2 AP
70 x 50 x 9.5 cm / 27 1/2 x 19 5/8 x 3 3/4 inches 
Plate: 65 x 45 x 0.5 cm / 25 5/8 x 17 3/4 x 1/4 in
Shelf: 9.5 x 50 x 6.8 cm / 3 3/4 x 19 5/8 x 2 5/8 in
© Thomas J Price
Courtesy the artist & Hauser & Wirth
Photo: Eva Herzog

Rashid Johnson Artwork
Rashid Johnson 
Untitled (Surrender), 2023
9-color silkscreen resist with hand-applied pigment
Co-published by Hauser & Wirth and Brand X Editions
Ed. of 51 + 15 AP
121.9 x 165.1 cm / 48 x 65 in
© Rashid Johnson
Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photo: Sarah Muehlbauer

Nicole Eisenman Artwork
Nicole Eisenman
Bar, 2012
Nine-color lithograph
AP 2/2, Ed. of 25 + 2 AP
78.1 x 59.7 cm / 30 3/4 x 23 1/2 in
© Nicole Eisenman
Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Jungle Press Editions
Photo: Sarah Muehlbauer

Hauser & Wirth returns to London Original Print Fair for the 40th anniversary with an exceptional selection of works reflecting the gallery’s commitment to prints and editions. Featuring works by both contemporary and modern artists from the gallery’s roster, the booth highlights the importance of printmaking to the artists’ multifaceted practices and celebrates the collaborations between artists and master printers. The fair presentation complements the gallery’s ongoing work with printmaking, which is headquartered in a dedicated Editions space on 18th Street in New York. 

Hauser & Wirth @ LOPF 2025: New releases and contemporary highlights

US artist Rashid Johnson debuts ‘Untitled (Surrender)’ (2023), a large silk screenprint which has been newly released by Hauser & Wirth and Brand X Editions. Part of the artist’s Surrender series, the large print features ghostly white faces which trace the development of his renowned Anxious Men series. The presentation also brings to London for the first time a selection of Henry Taylor’s etchings, first shown at the gallery’s editions space in New York earlier this year, including the self-portrait ‘Fade to Black, I Did Not Pay the Electric Bill’ and still life ‘I Love Looking at You’ (2024). 

Henry Taylor Artwork
Henry Taylor
I Love Looking at You, 2024
Color sugarlift aquatint
Ed. of 35 + 12 AP
123.2 x 106.7 cm / 48 1/2 x 42 in
© Henry Taylor
Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photo: Sarah Muehlbauer

William Kentridge Artwork
William Kentridge
I Look In The Mirror, I Know What I Need, 2024
Lithograph on handmade Korean paper
Ed. of 26 + 4 AP + 4 PP + 1 Archives + 1 BNF 128 x 168 cm /
50 3/8 x 66 1/8 in
© William Kentridge
All Rights Reserved
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur

Other major highlights include William Kentridge’s lithograph on handmade Korean paper ‘I Look In The Mirror, I Know What I Need’ (2024), featuring iconic motifs from the artist’s practice, such as the coffee pot. London-based artist Thomas J Price also debuts ‘Rood Boy (Untitled 2)’ (2024), which revisits an earlier print made in 2019 using 24ct gold leaf of a fictional character whose unflinching gaze meets directly with the viewer’s. Also based in London, artist Sonia Boyce’s ‘She is Benevolent’ (2024) takes inspiration from her latest video work ‘Benevolence’, a project for Palazzo della Ragione in Italy which examines traditional Italian folksongs as a powerful form of social commentary. 

The booth also features recent prints by contemporary artists, including a delicate copperplate etching by London-based artist Anj Smith from 2022 titled ‘Misleading, Like Lace,’ a selection of hardground etchings from George Condo and ‘Bar,’ a nine-colour lithograph print by Nicole Eisenman from 2012 made with Jungle Press Editions. 

Hauser & Wirth @ LOPF 2025: Historical modern masterworks

Philip Guston Artwork
Philip Guston
Rug, 1981
Lithograph
AP 4/11, Ed. of 50 + 11 AP
49.5 x 73.7 cm / 19 1/2 x 29 in
© The Estate of Philip Guston
Courtesy the Estate and Hauser & Wirth
Photo: Sarah Muehlbauer

Complementing the gallery’s contemporary offering, the booth highlights historic works by modern masters. Philip Guston’s ‘Rug’ (1980) depicts the groundbreaking figurative style which defines the artist’s late works and the recurring symbolic motif of shoes. The booth also includes a selection of prints by Takesada Matsutani from the 1960s – 1970s—during which time he worked at Atelier 17 in Paris, Stanley William Hayter’s printmaking studio. Additional 20th-century highlights include prints by Dieter Roth, Günther Förg and Eduardo Chillida

HAUSER & WIRTH

18/11/22

William Kentridge @ The Broad, Los Angeles - William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows - Exhibition + Catalogue

William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 12, 2022 - April 9, 2023

William Kentridge
William Kentridge
And When He Returned, 2019
Hand-woven mohair tapestry 
118 x 187 in. (300 x 475 cm) 
Collection of the Artist
© William Kentridge

William Kentridge
William Kentridge
The Shrapnel in the Woods, 2013
India ink on Crabb's Universal Technological Dictionary 1826
82 5/8 x 86 5/8 in. (210 x 220 cm)
© William Kentridge

The Broad presents landmark exhibition William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows surveying 35 years of the celebrated South African artist's work.

Born in Johannesburg in 1955 and living there his entire life, William Kentridge has dedicated much of his five-decade-long career to creating works that explore the social and political conditions of his home country’s transition from Apartheid to democracy. Spanning his well-known charcoal drawings and animated films to prints, bronze sculptures, tapestries, and theater models, the exhibition uses the paradoxes of light and shadow to directly engage with the aftermath of colonialism, the recording and memory of historical narratives, and how the artist’s studio can disrupt the certainties of long-held belief systems. The exhibition coincides with the release of a catalogue published by the museum in collaboration with DelMonico Books and will feature essays and interviews by William Kentridge, Ann McCoy, Zakes Mda, Walter Murch, and The Broad’s Curator Ed Schad.

“For decades, William Kentridge has looked at history–who writes it, what gets recorded by it, and what about it allocates power inside of societies–with an eye towards de-centering and unsettling what we think we know,” said The Broad Founding Director Joanne Heyler. “His viewpoint comes from the important and vital story of South Africa’s struggle for democracy, and it is a viewpoint that is able to look out at the wider world in an effort to show how fragile and ongoing that struggle remains.”

“The work of William Kentridge is a celebration of making, grounded in the cultural fabric of Johannesburg,” said The Broad Curator Ed Schad. “One encounters South African voices and histories, which are turned outwards to look at the wider world. In Kentridge’s collaborations, one feels the richness and energy of a workshop spirt which is defined by openness to unusual ideas, off-kilter points of view, and material disruptions which upends what we think we know.”

For the presentation in Los Angeles, all 18 works from the Broad collection join substantial loans from across the United States and South Africa. Organized both thematically and chronologically throughout the museum’s first-floor galleries, a highlight of the exhibition is The Broad collection’s 30-minute five-channel video installation The Refusal of Time (2012). One of Kentridge’s most celebrated, complex, and immersive works, incorporating elements of sound, sculpture, and moving image, The Refusal of Time is a rich contemplation on colonization and the standardization of time imposed by European interests on the rest of the world. At the core of the installation is a breathing machine the artist refers to as the “elephant” with rhythmic moving bellows, referencing the Dickens’ novel Hard Times, in which machines move “like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness.”

In addition to key drawings, sculptures, prints, and tapestries, the artist’s 11 Drawings for Projection films are on view, as well as a series of films that reflect on early cinema, including 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès, Day for Night, and Journey to the Moon (all 2003), a suite of nine short films that prominently feature the artist himself and celebrate the artist’s studio as a site of experimentation and associative play. Many recent drawings will be shown that were created for his monumental performance project The Head & the Load (2018), which unearth the neglected histories of Africans and Africa in World War I. Earlier works such as Art in a State of Grace, Art in a State of Hope, Art in a State of Siege (all 1988), and early films like Monument (1990) and Mine (1991), show Kentridge’s long-lasting political engagement, upholding artistry and the creative act as its own form of transformative knowledge.

Surveying 35 years of the celebrated South African artist’s practice, William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows features more than 130 works in an engaging and interactive design by Belgian designer Sabine Theunissen. Originated by The Broad, the exhibition will be traveling to Museum of Fine Arts, Houston in 2023.

William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
Clothbound Hardcover
10.5"H x 8.25"W - 288 Pages
© William Kentridge
The exhibition is accompanied by a monograph catalogue, published by The Broad in collaboration with Delmonico Books. The 288-page, book features William Kentridge’s well-known Drawings for Projection films, early prints, drawings, and sculptures, as well as major bodies of work made after 2012–including the monumental installation The Refusal of Time (2012)–which serve as an extended meditation on Kentridge’s studio practice. The volume is organized chronologically and thematically, starting with William Kentridge’s artistic beginnings in the 1970s and 1980s, leading into his destabilization of South African and global narratives through an openness to uncertainty, the generative power of the artist’s studio, and perpetual change, all as conditions for illuminating repressed and silenced voices in historical records. An essay by The Broad Curator Ed Schad is presented along with illustrations and analysis of William Kentridge’s work, joining essays by artist and writer Ann McCoy and renowned novelist and thinker Zakes Mda. Notably, the volume includes conversations between Kentridge with revolutionary film and sound editor Walter Murch. The catalogue is available at The Shop at The Broad and online for $65.
THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

28/07/16

William Kentridge @ Whithechapel Gallery, London - Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek - Museum der Moderne Kunst Salzburg

William Kentridge: Thick Time
Whithechapel Gallery, London
21 September 2016 - 15 January 2017
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark
16 February – 18 June 2017
Museum der Moderne Kunst Salzburg
22 July – 5 November 2017
The Whitworth, University of Manchester, 2018

Whitechapel Gallery presents a major exhibition of work by William Kentridge from 21 September 2016 to 15 January 2017. The exhibition titled Thick Time is curated by Iwona Blazwick, Whitechapel Gallery Director and will be the artist’s first major public solo presentation in the UK in over 15 years.

William Kentridge (b.1955, Johannesburg) is one of South Africa’s pre-eminent artists, globally acclaimed for his drawings, films, lecture performances and opera and theatre productions. His work draws on varied sources, including philosophy, literature and early cinema to create intricate art works and spellbinding environments in which he explores theories of time and relativity, the history of colonialism and the aspirations and failures of revolutionary politics.

William Kentridge: Thick Time will feature six works created between 2003 and 2016 – including two of the artist’s immersive audio-visual installations, The Refusal of Time (2012) and O Sentimental Machine (2003), which have never previously been exhibited in the UK. The exhibition will also feature his flip-book film, Second-hand Reading (2013), a series of mural-scale tapestries based on his opera production of Shostakovich’s The Nose and a set model which reveals his working process on the opera production Lulu (2016), which he will direct at English National Opera this November.

The Refusal of Time (2012) is an all-enveloping, multi-sensory installation that explores the transformation of time into material objects, sound, images and mechanics. Inspired by a series of conversations between Kentridge and American scientist Peter Galison around theories of time, the work is an extraordinary synthesis of moving images, sound and performance. A breathing sculpture or ‘elephant’ at its heart is based on 19th century attempts to measure and control time during the industrial revolution and high point of European colonial expansion. First shown at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany, The Refusal of Time is a collaboration between the artist with composer Philip Miller, projection designer and editor Catherine Meyburgh, and Peter Galison, a scientist from the United States.

The exhibition concludes with O Sentimental Machine (2015), originally commissioned for SALTWATER, 14th Istanbul Biennial, where it was installed in one of Istanbul’s oldest hotels, the Hotel Splendid Palas. In a critique of Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky’s notion that people are ‘sentimental but programmable machines’, subtitled videos of speeches by Trotsky and also his time in exile in Istanbul are projected on to glass doors on either side of the installation, offering the viewer the opportunity to observe what is going on behind the closed doors.

William Kentridge: Thick Time is co-curated by Iwona Blazwick, Whitechapel Gallery Director and Sabine Breitwieser, Director, Museum der Moderne Salzburg and is organised with the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark (16 February – 18 June 2017), Museum der Moderne Kunst Salzburg (22 July – 5 November 2017) and the Whitworth, University of Manchester in 2018.

Publication : The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully-illustrated publication which will include new critical writings on each of the works in the exhibition by curators and thinkers including Homi K. Bhabha, Joseph Leo Koerner and William Kentridge himself, alongside the artist’s chronology and bibliography. £24.99.

Whitechapel Gallery
www.whitechapelgallery.org

18/05/11

William Kentridge à Aix-en-Provence

Exposition William Kentridge   
Aix-en-Provence 
22 juin - 3 septembre 2011 

L'artiste sud-africain de renommée internationale, WILLIAM KENTRIDGE, plasticien, cinéaste et metteur en scène de théâtre et d'opéra dont les œuvres parcourent le monde depuis sa participation à la Documenta X de Kassel en 1997, investit, après le MoMa à New-York, le Louvre et le Jeu de Paume, à Paris, les hauts lieux de la culture aixoise, du 22 juin au 3 septembre 2011, pour y exposer ses œuvres protéiformes.

o Captures vidéo de l'installation de 8 fragments I am not Me, the Horse is not Mine, à la Cité du Livre - Inauguration le 22 juin à 18h. 

o Sculpture animée Chostakovith et projection du film Return, extrait du triptyque Breathe, Dissolve, Return, à l'Atelier de Cézanne - Rencontre avec l'artiste, le 30 juin.

o Le Nez de Dimitri Chostakovitch dans le cadre du Festival d'art lyrique d'Aix-en-Provence du 8 au 14 juillet. William Kentridge est le metteur en scène, scénographe et créateur vidéo de cette nouvelle production.

L'art de William Kentridge présente une variété de modes d'expression (dessin, vidéo, sculpture, installation, théâtre), au service d'une complexité révélée des formes plastiques. Son œuvre, à partir de  "détails"  - dessin au charbon le plus souvent - et par associations successives grâce auxquelles les dessins s'interpellent, tend à créer une cohérence narrative. Ainsi de l'Un, arrive-t-on au Multiple.

Avec la sculpture Chostakovitch l'agencement de fragments se fait par le vide. Un seul angle de vue permet d'imbriquer visuellement les divers éléments structurels afin d'en donner le portrait du compositeur dans sa plénitude.

Quand dans l'Armoire à Pharmacie William Kentridge rassemble ses dessins et se filme en train de les effacer, transformer, recomposer, il y dévoile une mise en abîme du processus créatif lui-même. Précarité, fragilité de toutes occurrences sont ici évoquées. Mais celles-ci semblent toutefois compensées par l'interrelation des « évènements » déployés sous la main de William Kentridge. Qu'il s'agisse de l'interdépendance des éclats de matière psychique qui façonne chaque individu où celle des individus eux-mêmes, parts d'une réalité politique et sociale. Thème cher à l'artiste. 

Cité du Livre, 8-10 rue des Allumettes, Aix en Provence
Atelier Cézanne, 9 avenue Paul Cézanne, Aix en Provence

www.aixenprovencetourism.com

04/07/04

William Kentridge: Shadow Procession at Seattle Art Museum

William Kentridge: Shadow Procession 
Seattle Art Museum
July 1, 2004 – October 17, 2004

Seattle Art Museum (SAM) presents South African artist William Kentridge’s video, Shadow Procession (1999). This seven-minute long video was recently added to SAM’s permanent collection as the museum continues to update its collection of international contemporary art.

William Kentridge is widely recognized for his handcrafted animated films, drawings and theatrical productions. Influenced by South Africa’s political policies, Kentridge once stated that it was the job of the artist to escape the “immovable rock of apartheid”. His art forms focus attention less on the specifics of apartheid and more on the disorienting effects of living amidst prolonged violence.

Shadow Procession is an animated film that illustrates how William Kentridge rebels against the seduction of special effects and returns to techniques of shadow-theatre. He depicts a procession of strange shadow figures slowly struggling to advance through a deserted landscape. This haunting parade of figures is made from cardboard cutouts that move across the screen, hauling their belongings—donkeys, carts, chairs, sacks, and even whole towns on their backs—as if in an exodus. Interrupting the exodus is a grotesque strutting buffoon, William Kentridge’s version of Ubu, a ridiculous dictator created by the French writer Alfred Jarry for a play entitled Ubu Roi in the late 19th century. An unexpected musical score accents the visual contrasts as “What a Friend I Have in Jesus” is sung by Alfred Makgalemele.

While Shadow Procession can be seen literally as a statement about the forced migrations of laborers in South Africa, it also questions two urban personalities- the person who stumbles from carrying too much of the world in their minds and the authority figure who doesn’t realize how bumbling his brute force seems to those around him. William Kentridge states, “I am trying to capture a moral terrain in which there aren’t really any heroes, but there are victims. A world in which compassion just isn’t enough.”

Fascination with William Kentridge’s expressive drawing and filmmaking techniques has inspired a documentary entitled Drawing the Passing. This 56-minute documentary, based on a collaboration between a filmmaker and an art historian in 1999, is available for viewing in the 4th floor resource room. Curated by Pamela McClusky, Art of African and Oceanic Curator.

SAM - SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
Seattle, WA 98101
www.seattleartmuseum.org