Langa Moshekwa

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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.”

  • Solo exhibitions

    Moshekwa Langa / Thresholds

    Group exhibitions

    Advance/...Notice

    Summer Show

    Joburg Art Fair 2011

    Open End: An Exhibition of Paintings

    Winter Show

    In Other Words

    Winter Show

    The Marks We Make

  • Biography

    Collections

    Solo Exhibitions

    Professional Appointments and Consultation

    Group Exhibitions

    Academic Record and Residencies

    Selected Articles and Reviews


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