Langa Moshekwa
Gallery News for Langa Moshekwa
Jodi Bieber and Moshekwa Langa on Shoe Shop
Works by Jodi Bieber and Moshekwa Langa feature on Shoe Shop – a Goethe-Institut project engaging with public space in Johannesburg by artistic means. The project explores individual narratives and personal stories that reflect upon the complexities of a roving life – at times touching on larger migratory movements, negotiated space, courageous walking, but also a joy in discovering new places and the simple act of walking. Rather than the usual question, ‘where do you come from?’, can we imagine a future and ask, ‘where are you going?’ The Shoe Shop festival is a series of events and project nodes that are arranged to reflect on movement and recontextualise it. The multicentered events work independently; and will be realised all over the greater Johannesburg. They bring together existent collectives, young and established artists and various initiatives that share similar interests, with the aim to collaborate and provide a dense and fluid space for a critical reflection and support of movement, mobility and migration.
The Shoe Shop festival includes photographic installations in public space; the opening of a month-long pop-up space, the Shoe Shop; a series of lectures/short presentations; artist walks and performances; a film programme and a photography and film workshop. A book will accompany the festival.
Photographs from Jodi Bieber’s Going Home – Illegality and Repatriation South Africa/Mozambique have been installed outside Cambridge Food Store on Pretorius Street in Hillbrow.
Moshekwa Langa’s film Where Do I Begin? will be screened Sunday 20 May, 3 p.m. at the Bioscope at Arts on Main.
For more information click here
Moshekwa Langa and Tracey Rose on the 11th Biennale de Lyon
Moshekwa Langa and Tracey Rose are participating in the 11th Biennale de Lyon, “A Terrible Beauty Is Born”, curated by Victoria Noorthoorn
“For the creation of the 11th Biennale de Lyon, historically a Biennale d’auteur,” explains Noorthoorn, “I have chosen to do as artists do: to grope, in the midst of a darkness that may or may not grow lighter as I advance, from point to point and from work to work, oriented by my obsessions, intuitions, and fears, and by the leads and provocations that each of the participating artists have thrown along my (that is, our) way. I have worked and traveled so that this show does it all at once: to address the uncertainty of the present and the near future, to speak about the condition of the artist and the necessity of art, while leaving the door open to doubt, to contradiction, to perplexity, to change and to movement.”
The 11th Biennale de Lyon will include around 70 artists from around the globe, but primarily from Europe, Africa and Latin America, across the 14,000 square meter of its four venues: La Sucrière, the Fondation Bullukian, the Musée d’Art Contemporain de Lyon, and the T.A.S.E. factory.
The Biennale runs from 15 September-31 December 2011.
Moshekwa Langa: Marhumbini: In An Other Time / at Kunsthalle Bern
For his solo exhibition at Kunsthalle Bern, South African artist Moshekwa Langa created a body of work specifically for the Kunsthalle. Titled Marhumbini: In An Other Time, this new project deals with loss. It features reworked drawings, gouaches and collages originally created in South Africa, as well as the installation “Pac Man’s Homes”, photography, and several videos. “The works on exhibition are suffused with memories of Langa’s loved ones and they index the experience and subsequent coming to terms with an accident – they are manifestations of ‘Trauerarbeit’, to use Freud’s term. They can be described as poetic and sentimental, but above all vulnerable, because they suggest a deep engagement of the artist with his personal life, and, at the same time, serve as a reminder that meaning is slippery.” (Excerpt from the press release).
The exhibition runs from 05 February to 27 March 2011
David Goldblatt, Moshekwa Langa and Kendell Geers at 29th São Paulo Biennial
The work of David Goldblatt, Moshekwa Langa and Kendell Geers features on the 29th São Paulo Biennial, taking place in Brazil from 25 September to 12 December 2010.
Curated by Moacir dos Anjos and Agnaldo Farias and a team of guest curators from various backgrounds including Fernando Alvim, Rina Carvajal, Yuko Hasegawa, Sarat Maharaj, and Chus Martinez, the title of the Biennial is “There is always a cup of sea to sail in”, which was inspired by a line by the poet Jorge de Lima in his work Invenção de Orfeu (1952).
The title considers the utopian dimension of art. According to the curators: “It is in the ‘cup of sea’ – or in this near infinite in which artists insist on producing their works – where in fact lies the power to move forward, despite everything else.” As de Lima continues, “the power to sail on even without ships / even without waves and sand.”
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Solo exhibitions
Moshekwa Langa / Thresholds
Goodman Gallery Johannesburg proudly presents Thresholds, a solo exhibition by internationally acclaimed, South African–born Moshekwa Langa.
Born in 1975 in Bakenberg, Limpopo, Langa left home at age 13 and returns now as an observer, an artist and a cartographer of geographical and psychological history. Thresholds is an intimate document of how past informs present, which in turn informs future; the contrast of a modern man observing the traditional rituals of his birthplace.
Thresholds is a photographic and film installation that documents the graduation from initiation rights in the Harmansdal village in Limpopo.The exhibition is made up of three bodies of work: men’s graduation, women’s graduation and the unveiling of a gravestone. These rites are a point of orientation in a broad story and passage. They situate the viewer and the artist in a biographical history, both personal and collective.
As a young child growing up in the area Langa was afraid of these rituals. He grew up in a house with 14 children and everyone went through the rituals except him because he left to live in Johannesburg. Langa says he is “afraid of the rituals but curious”.
The work includes a series of confrontational portraits that compel the viewer to engage with the gaze of the subjects. The observation and location of the artist emerges as a focal point of the work. The absence of the artist in the frame is the presence felt. The tug between comfort and discomfort from image to image, moment-to-moment and gaze-to-gaze is the thread that arrests our engagement.Through his observation, the artist attempts to understand the secrets of the rites of passage. Thresholds is a visual presentation and arrangement of his observation. The work is not an intervention but rather a report that informs the personal document of the artist’s life.
The grouping of the portraits is provocative and penetrating; the single gaze that pushes through the group of faces, the women in relation to the men, the young in relation to the old. It is the eyes in each group, which seem to imply the telling or not telling of the passage of induction.Also on the show and following on previous work by the artist are memory map drawings that link to a time when he was growing up, referencing the artist’s own passage and threshold.
Moshekwa Langa was a participant at Rijksakademie voor Beeldende Kunst, Amsterdam. His work has been included in several major local and international exhibitions. His work is a life story in progress and is made up of markers in a process of observation, markers in his biography.Moshekwa Langa lives and works in Amsterdam and Paris.
Group exhibitions
Advance/...Notice
Goodman Gallery Johannesburg welcomes you to 2012 with Advance/… Notice, an exhibition of new works by a dynamic group of contemporary artists from around the world. As we advance into a new calendar year, this exhibition gives notice of innovations from some of our artists who are already familiar to you, and of our new ventures into an intellectual exchange with artists with whom we are excited to work for the first time. This show will also give audiences a preview of what is to come, as many of the featured artists have solo shows planned for 2012 at Goodman Gallery spaces and other prestigious South African institutions.
Advance/… Notice introduces newly perfected techniques or processes for some of our well-known artists, such as platinum photographic prints by David Goldblatt, and a completely new turn of direction and field of interest for African American artist Hank Willis Thomas, who first exhibited with us on In Context in 2010, as well as for Sigalit Landau, the acclaimed Israeli artist we co-hosted at last year’s Venice Biennale. These international savants are joined by South African artists such as Hasan and Husain Essop, Moshekwa Langa, Mikhael Subotzky, Sue Williamson, William Kentridge, Rosenclaire, and Frances Goodman revealing either brand new works, or works not yet seen in Johannesburg. Also featured are works by Kendell Geers, whose retrospective exhibition will open at IZIKO South African National Gallery in late March 2012.
Our first show of the year seems an apt time to introduce the novel and the unexpected in the work of a number of artists and to also welcome prominent figures including Liza Lou, a world-renowned American now living and working in KwaZulu Natal; South African Candice Breitz, now resident in Berlin; Chilean-born New Yorker Alfredo Jaar; London-based Iranian Reza Aramesh, as well as Carla Busuttil – a young South African artist based in Berlin who is well-established in the United Kingdom, but has never before exhibited in her home country.
Liza Lou presents a work titled Gather Forty, one of a series of forty individual sculptures made from gold-plated beads that have been expertly threaded onto four hundred individual pieces of stainless steel wire and bound in a sheaf – continuing the shift of the beadwork medium from craft to conceptual art. Alfredo Jaar, internationally recognised artist, filmmaker and architect, celebrated for the public interventions he has created all over the world, shows From Time to Time, a panel of nine Time magazine covers focusing on Africa that either feature animals or malnourished Africans – revealing how the rest of the world often encapsulates its second largest continent. Breitz, who opens a major survey of her work titled Extra! at the Standard Bank Gallery this February, presents The Character, a video installation filmed in Mumbai that seeks to understand the role and influence of child characters in mainstream Indian cinema through interviews with a group of young moviegoers. In Action 78, Aramesh uses familiar scenes from news footage of the first Gulf War to restage, re-present and destabilise any easy readings of the conflicts we think we understand. Oil paintings by Busuttil offer a sinisterly-executed perusal of the exploitation of power and cruelty.
We are also very pleased to present for the first time the work of Nelisiwe Xaba, who will be presenting an interactive dance and video collaboration with Mocke J van Veuren at Goodman Gallery Projects in February. The crossover into visual art is exciting new territory for this renowned performer/dancer.
Goodman Gallery hopes you will join us to be inspired, challenged and excited by this exhibition and its promise of advances in the visual arts of South Africa. We trust you will find the exhibition gives notice of an innovative and exciting programme for 2012 in Johannesburg and Cape Town.Summer Show
Goodman Gallery Cape presents Summer Show – opening on 15 December and running until 14 January. The exhibition has been designed as a review, focusing on new and recent work by South Africans artists either represented by or associated with the gallery. Important works from series produced by the artists over the past year are showcased, and the show also features a selection of works recently shown at the gallery’s Johannesburg spaces.
The exhibition includes prints from Siemon Allen‘s Records series, in which the artist explores images of South Africa through the collection and archiving of music records from the beginning of the 20th Century to the present day. Photography is strongly represented, with works from Jodi Bieber’s vibrant, urban-denizen take in her Soweto series, in marked contrast with David Goldblatt’s large-scale colour prints of rural South Africa. Mikhael Subotzky (who recently won the 2012 Standard Bank Young Artist Award for Visual Art) and Patrick Waterhouse show recent work from their ongoing collaboration on the Ponte City project.
A text piece by Stuart Bird is shown in anticipation of his upcoming solo show in January, Gerhard Marx presents exquisitely detailed and artisanally worked surfaces in his new works, continuing his preoccupation with notions of mapping, place and nature, and Walter Oltmann shows a powerful new addition in aluminium wire to his series of insect suit sculptures.
Paintings by Moshekwa Langa, Lisa Brice and Clive van den Berg explore abstraction and gesture in different ways; all three have produced significant bodies of new works which were well received during 2011. Minnette Vari‘s uncanny brush and ink drawings of the goddess/crone Baubo sit in awkward dialogue with Kendell Geers’ La Sainte Vierge.
This exhibition affords a fascinating look at the output of some of South Africa’s major artists, and will also showcase from our Johannesburg spaces works not yet shown in Cape Town, including Kudzanai Chiurai’s Revelations, a series of photographic tableaux exploring politics and power in Africa, new wood sculptures by Willem Boshoff, and a selection of drawings, linocut graphics and sculpture by William Kentridge.
Joburg Art Fair 2011
The Joburg Art Fair was started three years ago by Artlogic with First National Bank as the primary sponsor.
It is the only art fair on the African continent and the only art fair in the world to focus on African contemporary art. Over the three year period it has become a meeting place for those interested in African contemporary art. The Joburg Art Fair is a small, boutique Fair committed to showcasing the best galleries interested in this region.
As it is the only large scale annual visual arts event in South Africa, the Fair makes an effort to give exposure to artists who work outside of the gallery circuit and routinely curate spaces for tertiary institutions, or project spaces that result from proposals submitted to Artlogic.
Each year our visitor numbers grow to include more foreigners, more students, and more of the general public interested in this kind of high-end contemporary event.
For 2011, we are working to curate a space that is welcoming and where visitors can spend an entire day. We are creating a food area that will sport four of the country’s top wine estates and a Pommery Champagne lounge in association with St Leger and Viney and Business Day Wanted Magazine.
Open End: An Exhibition of Paintings
Lisa Brice | Kudzanai Chiurai | Soly Cissé | Tom Cullberg | Claire Gavronsky | Robert Hodgins | David Koloane | Moshekwa Langa | Minnette Vári
There is an element of uncertainty inherent in the medium of paint – it is a fluid material that allows for various modes of expression, and as such is an ideal starting point for an examination of notions of nebulousness and accident.
Goodman Gallery Cape presents Open End, a group exhibition of paintings by both emerging and established artists that speaks to the element of uncertainty in artistic production and expression, and illustrates a process that seeks to arrive at meaning through search.
In an environment where so much emphasis is placed on work that is conceptually pre-determined, where the work is crafted around and invested with a deliberate and established message or meaning, the show aims to create a space for paintings produced without a clear conceptual starting point, focusing on the wrestle or the hunt for meaning rather than the expression of a packaged and determined project.
It is a simultaneously dangerous and powerful position to work from, unstable and vulnerable on the one hand, but filled with the potential of new and unexplored ideas, of work that is discursive and receptive to chance on the other. The title Open End refers not only to the absence of resolution, but to the very manner in which the work is approached: an embracing of uncertainty – or, to paraphrase Francis Bacon, a courting of accidents – in the search for meaning.
The exhibition will feature new works by Lisa Brice and David Koloane, and a painting created in situ by Kudzanai Chiurai. Tom Cullberg will show a series of abstract, perhaps metaphysical paintings dealing with the tensions that exist between the rational and the chaotic. Two anamorphic landscape-like paintings by Minnette Vári – first seen earlier this year as part of her solo show Parallax at Goodman Gallery Johannesburg – as well as several typically humorous and confrontational works by Moshekwa Langa will be included. Dakar-based artist Soly Cissé will show nine small monochrome paintings deftly straddling the figurative and the abstract, Claire Gavronsky will show an oil painting addressing notions of memory and loss, and several works by the incomparable Robert Hodgins illustrate the flex and the power of the medium.
Winter Show
Goodman Gallery presents a group exhibition simply titled Winter Show, featuring a range of local and international art luminaries. Traveling from Goodman Gallery Johannesburg, the show presents recent works by Goodman stalwarts such as William Kentridge, David Goldblatt, Sam Nhlengethwa and Mikhael Subotzky, as well as revealing a shift in the Gallery’s approach, showcasing work from around the African continent and beyond that is both explicitly and implicitly concerned with the synergies and tensions that exist between Africa and the rest of the globe. Some of the participating international artists, such as Ghada Amer, are not only being showcased, but are now officially represented by the Goodman Gallery.
The Winter Show will elaborate on the thorny notion of the politics of representation, which Brenda Atkinson and Candice Breitz confronted in their 1999 collection of essays Grey Areas: Representation, Identity and Politics in Contemporary South African Art. The book was a direct response to the critique of Nigerian curator Okwui Enwezor, who was the creative director of the Second Johannesburg Biennial in 1997. At the time, Enwezor interrogated the practice of artists such as Breitz, Minnette Vári and Penny Siopis, considering in great depth the question of ‘who has the right to represent whom?’. Now, over a decade later, accusations of misrepresentation have been revisited and reconsidered, not only by Enwezor himself and those whose essays were included in Grey Areas, but by the art community at large. The Winter Show augments the dialogue, bringing new voices into the conversation.
Compelling features of the Winter Show include one of artist, Kara Walker’s 2009 films – which are based on narratives from the archives of a bureau established in 1865 to assist African Americans with the transition from slavery to freedom – featuring the artist’s signature black-silhouette cut-out figures, which almost impossibly convey the complexities of race, gender, sexuality and power in their stilted and evocative movements. William Kentridge will present a new drawing produced this year, a large scale tapestry, as well as a maquette of the structure World on its Hind Legs, created in collaboration with Gerhard Marx.
With Goodman Gallery firmly established as a world-class contemporary art institution, the Winter Show will reveal the gallery’s commitment – not only to representing artists of the highest caliber, but to bringing an innovative programme of relevant and compelling international works to South Africa, offering audiences exposure to some of the best contemporary work being produced, both locally and abroad.
In Other Words
‘Language’ is the system of communication, in the form of speech and writing, employed by a specific group of people, usually originating from a specific geographical area or region. Human language is inseparable from human thought and distinguishes man from animals.
Different aspects of language had become the source for many conceptual artworks by the time the group Art & Language was founded by Michael Baldwin, David Bainbridge, Terry Atkinson, and Harold Hurrell in 1968. These artists considered language to be a crucial aspect of their practice, in which they critiqued the underlying assumptions of modern painting and sculpture, formalist processes, art practices, production, and criticism. Since the 1970s, language has been seen as a means of moving from form and image-based works to a more theoretical and conceptual artistic discourse. This shift, away from the image and towards text, has led to a new relationship between image and text, in which images are translated to symbols, and symbols to text. It has meant that text – rather than image – becomes a basis for art production, which in turn has meant the appearance of ‘art as idea’.
Questioning the process of art production, American artists like Jenny Holzer have built on the traditions of conceptual and installation art of the late 1960s. Holzer developed a mode of textual art during the 1970s, using electronic signs and various printed media to explore language and text as a form of art. Her ‘Inflammatory Essays’, conceived in the late 1970s, are indicative of the way in which she has created a division between text and image. Prior to this, Joseph Kosuth proposed the use of text in his work as means of replacing painting, exploring the production and role of language and meaning in art. Text in Kosuth’s work of the 1960s facilitates a conceptual mode of production and the dissolution of the art object.
Language continued to be fundamental in the work of many American artists during the 1980s. Lorna Simpson, for example, used language as a device to move away from purely image-based photography. Simpson’s combination of text and photography allowed her to construct readings of the black woman as an erotic curiosity and, at the same time, to change the simple reading of images, and to create layers of signification in her work.
In the contemporary South African context, artists such as Willem Boshoff make works which are informed by language. Boshoff’s sculptures and dictionaries suggest a relationship with language that extends beyond the simple use of text, to a specific interest in language itself and what constitutes language as a form.
Similarly, Frances Goodman has explored the desires, compulsions, insecurities, and obsessions hidden in our use of language, saying that ‘After working with a number of media I eventually found that words and language had the uncanny ability to unnerve and get under people’s skins, in a way that visual images and modes could not … sometimes [words] are simple and clear, and yet they are often full of innuendoes and subtexts’.
Language also defines power relations, and in the colonial context, the language of the coloniser reinforced power structures and symbolised authority. Artists have often made reference to this in their works, showing the role that language plays in our relation to society and to power. Brett Murray for example, plays with words in order to critique South African politics. Kudzanai Chiurai uses posters, such as the kind used in political campaigns, , to demonstrate state violence, political unrest, and corrupted power.
Kendell Geers uses language to interrogate the art establishment and society in general, questioning our existing moral codes and suggesting new approaches. He has argued that ‘Language is a self-replicating virus that can only be destroyed by a stronger, more resilient virus. Through the mirror of the colloquial, the tongue gets twisted and forgets its place in collecting our thoughts’, and that ‘language is oppressive for it only acknowledges that which can be named. It is not the result of any particular individual’s design as much as the external manifestation of culture’.
Works by these artists and the others on this show have been chosen for their engagement with language and discourse. Sometimes this engagement is enacted on the level of form – so that words and characters become images – and at other times the engagement is an interrogation, through text, of what constitutes the image.
Winter Show
This winter the Goodman Gallery will relaunch its Parkwood space, which has been extensively reconsidered, both physically and conceptually. This launch will be initiated with a group exhibition simply titled Winter Show, featuring a range of luminary-status local and international artists. The show will not only present recent works by Goodman stalwarts such as William Kentridge, David Goldblatt, Sam Nhlengethwa and Mikhael Subotzky, but will also reveal a shift in the Gallery’s approach, showcasing work from around the Continent and beyond that is both explicitly and implicitly concerned with synergies and tensions between Africa and the rest of the globe. Some of the participating international artists, such as Ghada Amer and Hank Willis Thomas, are not only being showcased by the Goodman Gallery, but are now officially represented by us.
The Winter Show will act as a confluence of the Goodman Gallery’s top represented artists, as well as artists participating in In Context – a series of exhibitions and interventions currently taking place at Arts on Main and other venues in Johannesburg. Artists such as Jenny Holzer, Amer, Willis Thomas, Bili Bidjocka, Willem Boshoff and Kara Walker will participate in both shows, with the Winter Show presenting some of their more recent work. While In Context manifests an intimate and often candid exploration of the dynamics of the African continent, the Winter Show will offer a broader conceptual platform, covering many aspects of South African, African and global landscapes and conditions.
The Winter Show will elaborate on the thorny notion of the politics of representation, which Brenda Atkinson and Candice Breitz confronted in their 1999 collection of essays Grey Areas: Representation, Identity and Politics in Contemporary South African Art. The book was a direct response to the critique of Nigerian curator Okwui Enwezor, who was the creative director of the Second Johannesburg Biennial in 1997. At the time, Enwezor interrogated the practice of artists such as Breitz, Minnette Vári and Penny Siopis, intricately considering the question of ‘who has the right to represent whom?’ Now, over a decade later, accusations of misrepresentation have been revisited and reconsidered not only by Enwezor himself and those whose essays were included in Grey Areas, but by the art community at large. In Context magnifies these issues, while the Winter Show augments the dialogue, bringing new voices into the conversation.
Compelling features of the Winter Show include two of Walker’s 2009 films – which are based on narratives from archives of a bureau established in 1865 to assist African Americans with the transition from slavery to freedom – presenting the artist’s signature black-silhouette cut-out figures, which almost impossibly convey the complexities of race, gender, sexuality and power in their stilted and provocative movements. Jenny Holzer’s Purple Red Curve (2005) transmits a coalescence of master narratives through a curved electronic LED sign. Jeremy Wafer will create a site-specific wall drawing in the Goodman Gallery specifically for the show. Kentridge will present a series of new drawings produced this year as well as a maquette of the structure World on its Hind Legs, created in collaboration with Gerhard Marx. A large scale, steel version of this work will be launched at the Apartheid Museum on 8 July 2010 as part of In Context. The Winter Show will also feature an ongoing screening of all of the Goodman Gallery’s top art films by leading artists such as Kentridge and Vári.
The Goodman Gallery in Parkwood has undergone numerous physical transformations and now boasts a new showroom and a space dedicated to photographic works. We are in the process of establishing an art library accessible to the visiting public and will offer a range of educational art talks and events during the Winter Show.
With Goodman Gallery firmly established as a prestigious, world-class contemporary art institution, the Winter Show will reveal how the Gallery – beyond representing artists of the highest caliber – is dedicated to bringing an innovative programme of relevant and compelling international works to South Africa, offering audiences exposure to some of the best contemporary work being produced locally and abroad.
The Marks We Make
Ryan Arenson | Walter Battiss | Deborah Bell | Justin Brett | Lisa Brice | Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin | Adam Broomberg | Kudzanai Chiurai | Marlene Dumas | Claire Gavronsky | Robert Hodgins | William Kentridge | David Koloane | Moshekwa Langa | Alexandra Makhlouf | Brett Murray | Sam Nhlengethwa | Walter Oltmann | Jonah Sack | Kathryn Smith | Jaco Spies | Clive Van Den Berg | Diane Victor | Jeremy Wafer | Sue Williamson
For many artists, drawing forms part of a larger process – a loose way of visualizing an artwork before committing to it in a more permanent medium. But the act of drawing itself remains one of the oldest and most eloquent forms of artistic expression. Goodman Gallery Cape is proud to present a group exhibition of drawings entitled ‘The Marks We Make’, exploring notions of mark-making as assertions of ownership and expressions of violence, memory and play.
Drawing usually refers to pencil marks on paper. In this exhibition we approach the term more loosely, featuring a range of media to question what constitutes a drawing and what gives it power. Works will include photographs from the Red House series by Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin, depicting the marks left behind by prisoners of Saddam Hussein in Iraq; wire and sculptural elements by Walter Oltmann and William Kentridge; installations by Jeremy Wafer, Jonah Sack and Justin Brett, as well as more traditional pencil, oil and charcoal drawings by Sue Williamson, Lisa Brice and Sam Nhlengethwa.
‘The Marks We Make’ brings together South African artists to explore the ways in which marks shape our environments and inform our perspectives. Bodies are circumscribed, silenced or marginalized by the invasive marks of violence. But these marks can also be used to express an identity, stake out a position or form communities. Territory is claimed, land contested, and ownership asserted through the use of marks, both physical and symbolic. The exhibition seeks to interrogate the ways in which these marks act to create the contingent, political spaces within which we form ourselves, and the role they play in shaping our personal and cultural memories.
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Biography
Moshekwa Langa was born in 1975 in Bakenberg, South Africa. His work has been included in several major exhibitions including travelling shows The Short Century and Africa Remix, the 50th Venice Biennale in 2003, the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009 and the 29th São Paulo Biennale 2010. He has held numerous solo shows, in his home country at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg and Cape Town, as well as abroad at institutions such as the Cincinnati Contemporary Arts Center (2003) and MAXXI – Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo – in Rome (2005). He recently held a solo exhibition at Kunsthalle Bern, titled Marhumbini: In An Other Time (2011). Langa lives and works in Amsterdam, Paris, Brussels and Johannesburg
Collections
MOMA, New York, USA
MUHKA, Antwerp, Belgium
Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town, SA
Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council, Johannesburg, SA
Sandton Civic Gallery, Sandton, Johannesburg, SA
Solo Exhibitions
2012 Solo Exhibition , University of Illinois, Chicago, United States of America, End of 2012
2012 To Be Confirmed, Raw Material Company, Dakar, Senegal
2011 Marhumbini: In An Other Time Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland
2010 Wuthering Heights , Galerie Mikael Andersen, Berlin
2010 Black Maria , Galerie Mikael Anderson, Copenhagen
2009 Rose Coloured Glasses, Bernier-Eliades Gallery, Athens, Greece, Babylonia
2009 Art Unlimited, Basel, Switzerland with Goodman Gallery, Taché-Lévy Gallery & Bernier-Eliades Gallery
2008 Miracle in the Rain, Taché-Lévy Gallery, Brussels, Belgium
2007 Encounters: Moshekwa Langa – Homeland, Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, UK
2007 The Inheritance of Loss, Goodman Gallery Cape, Cape Town, South Africa
2006 Moshekwa Langa, MAXXI, Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI SECOLO, Roma, Italy
2006 The man who cast no shadows, Taché-Lévy Gallery, Brussels, Belgium
2006 Terms of Endearment, Galeria Bonomo, Rome, Italy
2005 Backlash Blues, The Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2004 Present+Tense, Düsseldorf Kunstverein, Germany
2003 Interior Monologues, Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, USA
2002 Galerie Ascan Crone, Andreas Osarek, Berlin, Germany
2001 Island Tourist Hotel, Gallerie Tanya Rumpff, Haarlem, The Netherlands
2000 Bernier-Eliades Gallery, Athens, Greece
2000 Another Time, Another Place, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1999 Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva
1999 Live and in Person, The Renaissance Society, Chicago
1997 Beware of Imitations, Galerie Frank Hanel, Frankfurt am Mein, Germany D’OR *
(special project in the garden of the museum, during the Blank exhibition at Nai
Rotterdam),
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen,Rotterdam, The Netherlands
1995 Rembrandt van Rijn Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
Professional Appointments and Consultation
Television producer / director: South African Broadcasting Corporation, Johannesburg
Body transformation (The Works)
Producer/director 22 minutes
The South African Film Industry (The Works) (Co-producer / co-director: Jann Turner)
15 minutes
The Marginalised Faiths (The Works) Producer / director 5,5 minutes
The National Anthem (Arts Unlimited) Producer / co-director 8 minutes
What’s Queer Here Producer / director Commissioned by The Works: in pre-production
Group Exhibitions
2011 Don’t/ Panic , Durban Art Gallery, Durban, South Africa
2011 The Global Contemporary Art Worlds After 1989 , ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art, Germany
2011 11th Biennale de Lyon
2011 Water, the [Delicate] Thread of Life , Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
2010 29th São Paulo Biennale
2010 Winter Show, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
2009 Hypocrisy: The Sitespecificity of Morality , The Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, Norway
2009 Fare Mondi/ Making Worlds, 53rd Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
2008 Bernier-Eliades Gallery, Athens, Greece
2008 Power Play, Goodman Gallery Cape, Cape Town, South Africa
2008 Inside Out , Galerie Mikael Andersen, Berlin, Germany
2008 Flow , The Studio Museum, Harlem, New York, USA
2008 Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie , Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, New York
2007 Expats / Clandestines , Wiels Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels, Belgium
2007 On Memory , Johan Deumens Gallery, Harlem, The Netherlands
2007 Who’s got the Big Picture , MuHKA, Antwerp, Belgium
2007 Circulez ! Il n’y a rien à voir, Zhang Enli & Moshekwa Langa , Objectif _ Exhibitions, Antwerp
2006 Museum of The African Diaspora, San Francisco
2006 Farrago , Bernier-Eliades Gallery, Athens, Greece
2006 Blaffer Gallery, the Art Museum of the University of Houston, Texas
2006 Africa Remix, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo
2006 &Contested Territories: Representing Postcolonial Interests, Greenland National Museum and Archives (NKA)
2006 Olvida quien soy, Centro Atlantico de Arte Moderno, Las Palmas, Gran Canaria
2006 Re-dis-trans – Voltage of Relocation Displacement, Apexart, New York, USA
2006 Nederland 1, Stedelijk Museum, Gouda, The Netherlands
2006 Snap Judgments: New Positions in Contemporary African Photography, The International
2006 Centre of Photography, New York, USA
2006 There and Back, La Casa encedida, Madrid, Spain
2005 Peabody Essex Museum, Salem. MA, USA
2005 Museo Galouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon. Portugal
2005 Africa Remix, Hayward Galleries, London. UK
2005 Africa Remix, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France
2005 Gallery SAW, Ottawa, Canada
2004 Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo per l’Arte, Turin, Italy
2004 Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, USA
2004 Barbican Art Galleries, London, UK
2004 Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, USA
2004 Cranbrook Art Museum,Bloomfield Hills, MI, USA
2004 A Fiction of Authenticity, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, USA,
2004 Regina Gouger Miller Gallery, Purnell Center for the Arts, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, USA
2004 Africa Remix, Museum Kunst Palast, Dusseldorf, Germany
2003 Post Border Land – Afrikaanse kunsternaars pakken uit in Bagagehal’,
Bagagehal
2003 Loods, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2003 Somewhere Better than this Place: Alternative Social Experience in the Spaces
of Contemporary Art, The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, USA
2003 How Latitudes Become Forms: Art in a Global Age, Walker Art Center,
Minneapolis, USA;
2003 Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, USA
2003 Black President: The Art and Legacy of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, New Museum of
Contemporary Art, New York, USA
2003 Looking Both Ways: Art of the Contemporary African Diaspora, Museum for
African Art, New York, USA
2003 Dreams and Conflicts: The Viewers’ Dictatorship; Faultlines, The 50th Venice
Biennale, Venice, Italy
2002 The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa
1945-1994, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich; Haus der kulturen der welt, Martin Gropius-
Bau, Berlin
2002 Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New
York
2002 Watching Ocean and Sky Together , part of the Liverpool Biennial, Public Art
Development Trust Liverpool Biennial, Fourth Wall, Liverpool, United Kingdom
2001 Africas: The Artist and the City – a Journey and an Exhibition, Centre de
Cultura Contemporania de Barcelona, Spain
2001 Juncture, The Granary, Cape Town and Studio Voltaire, London
2001 The Place of Happiness, The Watari Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo,
Japan
2000 Man and Space, Kwangju Biennale, Korea
2000 Fun Five Fun Story – Guinness ContemporaryArt Project, Art Gallery of New
South Wales, United Kingdom
2000 Paris pour escale, Musee d’Art Moderne de la ville de Paris, France
2000 Blick-Wechsel – Afrikanische Videokunst, Ifa Galerie Bonn ; Ifa Galerie
Stuttgart ; Ifa Galerie Berlin
2000 Saman Taivaan Alla, Vuosaari (Under the Same Sky), Kiasma external
projects European Culture Capital, Helsinki, Finland
1999 Works on Paper, Galerie Tanya Rumpff, Haarlem, The Netherlands
1999 Celcius: (neue) Kunst aus dem (neuen) Sudafrika,Ccontemporary Visions
from a New South Africa, Ifa Galerie, Bonn, Germany
1999 Drawings: Moshekwa Langa and Peter Land, H&R Projects, kanaal 20,
Brussels, Belgium
1999 Africa: Trafique S.M.A.K: extra muros, various venues including Kicherie
Patiron, Ghent, Belgium
1999 Generation Z, P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Centre, New York, USA
1999 De Dia – Liebaert Projects, Kortrijk
1999 Centro d’Arte Contemporanea Ticino, Italy
1999 New Worlds: Contemporary Art from Australia, Canada and South Africa,
Canada House Gallery, London, United Kingdom
1999 New Republics, Edmonton Art Gallery, Edmonton, Canada, Australian Centre
for Contemporary Art, Melbourne, Australia
1998 XXIV Bienal de Sao Paulo, Parque Ibirapuera, Sao Paulo, Brazil
1998 Unlimited. Nl, de Appel Centre for Contemporary Art, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands
1998 Transatlantico, Centro Atlantico de Arte Moderno, Las Palmas, Canary Islands
1998 Open Ateliers, Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands
1998 Memorias Intimas Marcas, The Electric Workshop, Johannesburg, South
Africa
1998 FNB Vita Art Prize, Sandton Civic Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1998 Power Up: Between experience and expectation, Museum voor Moderne
Kunst, Amhem, The Netherlands
1998 7th Triennale der Kleinplastik, Sudwest LB Forum, am Hauptbahnhof 2,
Stuttgart, Germany
1998 Traffic of Night in Paradise, an artist’s initiative, Vrieshuis Amerika,
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
1998 AIDS Worlds: Between Resignation and Hope, Centre d’Art Contemporain
Geneve, Switzerland
1997 Hitch-hiker, The Generator Art Space, Newtown, Johannesburg, South Africa
1997 The individual and his memory /El individuo y su memoria, 6th Biennal de la
Habana, Havana, Cuba
1997 Die Anderen Modernen, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
1997 Purity and Danger, Wits University Art Galleries, Johannesburg, South Africa
1997 Big Blue, Coins Café, London; Adler Café, Fix Cafe, Berlin
1997 Cartographers: Geognostic projections of the 21st Century, Museum of
Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia (Catalogue), Cantre for Contemporary Art, Zamek,
Ujazdowski, Warsw, Poland, Art Pavilion Muscamok, Budapest, Hungary, Umetnostna
Galerija, Maribor
1997 Atlas Mapping: Artists as cartographers, Offenes Kulturhaus, Linz, Austria
1998 Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz
1998 On life, beauty, translations and other difficulties…, The 5th International
Istanbul Biennal,Yerebantan Cistern, Istanbul
1998 Fin de siécle à Johannesburg, Usine Lu, Nantes, France
1998 Trade Routes: History and Geography, The 2nd Johannesburg Biennale,
South African National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa
1998 Open Ateliers, Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands
1996 Unplugged, Rembrandt van Rijn Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1996 Junge Kunst aus Südafrika, Galerie Frank Hänel, Frankfurt, Germany
1996 South Africa at the Forefront, The October Gallery, London, United Kingdom
1996 Colours: Kunst aus Südafrika, Haus der Kultuen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
1996 The Young and the Restless without Permission, Sandton Civic Art Gallery,
Johannesburg, South Africa
1996 Groundswells, The Mermaid Theatre, London, United Kingdom
1996 Faultlines, The Castle of Good Hope, Cape Town, South Africa
1996 Don’t Mess with Mr Inbetween, Culturgest, Lisbon, Portugal
1995 Somewhere at a distance from Both, with Roger Palmer, Siyawela: Love,
Loss and Liberation in South African Art, Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery,
Birmingham, United Kingdom; Gertrude Posel Gallery and Studio Gallery, Wits
University, Johannesburg, South Africa
1995 Gay Rights Rites / Re-writes, Maarten Melckhuis Museum, Cape Town
1995 Olievenhuis Museum, Bloemfontein; Wits University Art Galleries,
Johannesburg, South Africa
1995 Vita Art Now, Johannesburg, South Africa
Academic Record and Residencies
Education:
1997-1998: Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Residencies:
2007-2008 Residences Internationales aux Recollets, Paris, France
2002 Artists in Residence, The Fabric Workshop & Museum, Philadelphia, USA
2002 Triangle Arts Trust, Grand Rivière, Martinique
Selected Articles and Reviews
1999, January. Art Forum: ‘Preview: Moshekwa Langa, Centre d’Art Contemporain’,
pg 64
1999, February. Art Forum: ‘XXIV Bienal de Sao Paulo: Fundacao Bienal de Sao Paulo’,
pg 103
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