Rhodes University 2011 Graduate show

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Rhodes University: BFA Final Exhibitions 2011 Opening 17 November 2011

Lauren Edwards


Calypso Ray


Minke Wasserman


Leora Jones


Nastassja Hill


Simone Heymans


Denys Dixie


Yolandi

Suvania Naidoo


Elsa Lourens

Jessica Bosworth Smith


Kate Brook-Hart


Zanne Reyneke


Rhodes University Fine Art Department graduate exhibitions

The recent annual Fine Art Department Graduate Exhibitions, hosted at numerous venues around Grahamstown, boasted a wide variety of work from Rhodes University’s fourth year Fine Art students. Of the 19 graduate exhibitions themes relating to socio-historical, political, environmental and personal concerns were investigated in a diversity of mediums. A dominant theme at this year’s exhibition was the construction of the natural world, which was evidenced in golden elephants, unholy cows, red ants, webbed horses, grazing cupboards, preserved chimps and evacuation plans for Africa which were displayed on canvases and prints, walls, floors, ceilings and pillars. Warren Canning’s Google Earth oils of urban fringe spaces show where the city disintegrates into the hostile landscape, while Russell Bruns’ New Dorp City depicts the city as alien, threatening and inhospitable, where ghostly humans flit through city streets. Continuing the theme of explorations of the city Lauren Edwards and Leora Jones’s work evoke the inner space of the city as a place of threat, to illuminate and to protect oneself from. Exploring the private/public intimacies of the bedroom, Zanne Reyneke’s linen works echo the drive, desire and voyeurism of Samantha Munroe’s digital works. Explorations of the natural world also featured prominently in the exhibition, with Jennifer Coppinger's animal hybrids and Nastassja Hill's bottled creatures reflecting on the tenuousness of the natural world under scrutiny, observation and exploitation. Alicia Nicola considers meaning making, existentialism and the everyday and Kate Brook-Hart’s Machinations presents a take on the political satire in the daily running of a new democracy. Identity, the ‘interior’, and the subconscious strata of dreams, mental disorders, child’s play and the uncanny are considered in the works of Jessica Bosworth Smith, Denys Dixie, Calypso Ray, Minke Wasserman and Ryan Haynes, while Suvania Naidoo’s ZA/in reflects the complex layers of identity embodied by a South African Indian female, influenced by western post-colonial society. Sven Christian’s Facebook paint projections continue this theme of self examination as he considers the self as constructed through web media. Story by Sarah-Jane Bradfield


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