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Sue Williamson | Testimony

11 March - 24 April 2021
Goodman Gallery, London

Sue Williamson Testimony Goodman Gallery London 11 March – 24 April 2021

Goodman Gallery presents Testimony, a solo exhibition by British-South African artist Sue Williamson. This exhibition, which marks Williamson’s first solo presentation in the UK, spans the artist’s seminal 1990s series through to recently completed work.

Williamson is part of a pioneering generation of South African artists who challenged the apartheid government from the 1970s and has been represented by Goodman Gallery from 1993 – the year she held her first solo exhibition at the gallery for which she won the 1994 Vita award for best exhibition in the country in the previous year.

Artworks

Colour laser prints, wood, metal, plastic and perspex
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Unavailable
Laminated colour laser prints, wood, metal, plastic and perspex
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Colour laser prints, wood, metal, plastic and perspex
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Colour laser prints, wood, metal, plastic and perspex
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Laminated colour laser print, wood, metal, plastic
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Laminated colour laser print, wood, metal, plastic
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Laminated colour laser print, wood, metal, plastic
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Laminated colour laser print, wood, metal, plastic
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Laminated colour laser print, wood, metal, plastic
Work: 84 x 121 x 6 cm
Found objects in casting resin and perspex case
Work: 44 x 102 x 12 cm
Two-channel video installation
Variable Dimensions
Two-channel video installation
Variable Dimensions
Two-channel video installation
Variable Dimensions
Two-channel video installation with stereo audio
Variable Dimensions
Engraved glass and steel frame
Work: 75 x 65 cm
Hand engraved glass and steel frames
Work: 81 x 58.5 cm
Hand engraved glass and steel frames
Work: 83 x 47 cm
Hand engraved glass and steel frames
Work: 78 x 66 cm
Hand engraved glass and steel frames
Work: 74 x 57 cm
Hand engraved glass and steel frames
Work: 68 x 71 cm
Patinated brass and painted aluminium
Work: 10.9 x 190 cm
Patinated brass and painted aluminium
Work: 10.9 x 190 cm
Patinated brass and painted aluminium
Work: 35 x 45 cm

About

Sue Williamson image

Sue Williamson

Sue Williamson (b. 1941, Lichfield, UK) emigrated with her family to South Africa in 1948. In the 1970s, Williamson started to make work which addressed social change and by the late 1980s she was well known for her series of portraits of women involved in the country’s political struggle, titled A Few South Africans (1980s). 

Major international solo exhibitions include: Can’t Remember, Can’t Forget at the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg (2017); Other Voices, Other Cities at the SCAD Museum of Art in Georgia, USA (2015), Messages from the Moat, Den Haag, Netherlands (2003) and The Last Supper Revisited (2002) at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C. Williamson has participated in biennales around the world, including the Kochi Muziris Biennale (2019); several Havana Biennales as well as Sydney, Istanbul, Venice and Johannesburg biennales. Group exhibitions include, Resist: the 1960s Protests, Photography and Visual Legacy (2018) at BOZAR in Brussels; Women House (2017, 2018) at La Monnaie de Paris and National Museum for Women in the Arts (Washington D.C); Citizens: Artists and Society Tate Modern, London; Being There (2017) at Fondation Louis Vuitton (Paris) and Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life (2014) at the International Centre for Photography New York and the Museum Africa (Johannesburg), curated by Okwui Enwezor, and The Short Century (2001-2) also curated by Okwui Enwezor, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, House of World Cultures, Berlin, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and P.S.1 New York.

Williamson’s works feature in museum collections, ranging from the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Tate Modern (London), Victoria & Albert Museum (London), Pompidou Centre, (Paris), Hammer Museum, (Los Angeles) to the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution (Washington D.C), Iziko South African National Gallery (Cape Town) and the Johannesburg Art Gallery (Johannesburg). Williamson has authored two books - South African Art Now (2009) and Resistance Art in South Africa (1989). In 1997, Williamson founded www.artthrob.co.za, a leading website on South African contemporary art and the first of its kind in the country.  Awards and fellowships include The Living Legends Award (2020), attributed by the South African government’s Department of Sports, Arts and Culture; the University of Johannesburg’s Ellen Kuzwayo Award (2018); the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Creative Arts Fellowship (2011); the Smithsonian’s Visual Artist Research Award Fellowship (2007) and the Lucas Artists Residency Fellowship (2005) from Montalvo Art Center in California.

Williamson lives and works in Cape Town, South Africa.

Download full CV