Subscribe to our newsletter for our must-see exhibitions, artists, events and more here
Shop William Kentridge Prints here

Clive van den Berg / A Pile of Stones / 2017

19 January - 15 February 2017
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg

Goodman Gallery Johannesburg 19 January – 15 February 2017

How to represent the horror without re-inscribing it?

After seeing ISIS propaganda footage of gay men thrown from rooftops in Syria and Iraq and then publicly stoned, Clive van den Berg needed to “make good” these violated lives.

Artworks

Watercolour on paper
Unavailable
Wood and oil colour
45 x 30 x 20 cm
Unavailable
Watercolour on paper
Unavailable
watercolour on paper
Unavailable
watercolour on paper
Unavailable
Wood and oil colour
Unavailable
Wood, wax and pigment on metal base
104 x 70 x 40 cm
Watercolour on paper
Unavailable
watercolour on paper
Unavailable
Oil on canvas
Unavailable

About

Clive van den Berg image

Clive van den Berg

Clive van den Berg (b. 1956, Zambia) is an artist, curator and designer, who works on his own and in collaboration with colleagues in a collective called trace, whose primary activities are the development of public projects. He has had several solo exhibitions in South Africa, and his work is regularly exhibited abroad. His public projects have included the artworks for landmark Northern Cape Legislature and, since he has joined the trace team, museum projects for the Nelson Mandela Foundation, Constitution Hill, Freedom Park, the Workers Museum, The Holocaust and Genocide Centre and many other projects.

Van den Berg has much experience working on large-scale institutional projects with teams representing diverse constituencies: urban planners and policy makers, architects, landscape designers, museum curators, historians, community liaison officials and representatives of local and national governments. In the Northern Cape, for example, where he worked with the Luis Ferreira da Silva architects, he pioneered a new strategy for integrating forms of the local landscape and indigenous aesthetics into the overall building design, while also training local artisans as part of a skills transference project aimed at long-term sustainability. The result is a world-renowned and uniquely South African state edifice: a monument to the people of the Northern Cape.

Download full CV