MAWANDE KA ZENZILE THE PROBLEM WE DIDN’T CREATE
MAWANDE KA ZENZILE THE PROBLEM WE DIDN’T CREATE
Letter for Sarah batman to Josephine Baker 2011, earth, cow dung and oil on canvas, 180 x 119cm
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A Lesson, 2013, cow dung and oil on canvas, 167.5 x 139cm
Portrait of Patrice Lumumba, Portrait of Toussaint Louverture, Portrait of King Hintsa: Aa Zanzolo, Portrait of Elizabeth II: forever more, all 2013, cow dung and oil on canvas, 50 x 50cm
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Ikati elel’eziko, 2013, installation with commercial wood and stones (igoqo) and found family portrait (reproduced, enlarged and framed)
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Inqawe: Series (detail), 2013, smoking pipes (meranti wood), wallpaper and steel, 90 x 54cm each
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Inqawe: Series, 2013, smoking pipes (meranti wood), wallpaper and steel, 90 x 54cm each
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Double date, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 170 x 240cm
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Sabotage: after Muhammad Ali, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 182 x 102cm Crime scene, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 182 x 101cm
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uGologolo-indoda yaseKomani 2013, commercial wood and stones (igoqo), money box, dimensions variable Performance with Lihle Mananga, 28 November 2013, Stevenson, Cape Town
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JFK: Historical painting, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 160 x 280cm
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Martyrdom: Geronimo, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 85 x 85cm
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Plan for Titanic I, 2013, cow dung, bitumen sealer and oil on canvas, 50 x 50cm Plan for Titanic II, 2013, cow dung, bitumen sealer and oil on canvas, 50 x 50cm Honoring the Flag, 2014, two American flags, sound, installation dimensions variable
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Black man you are on your own, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 170 x 240cm
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Crash: Letter for JG Ballard 2013, car with customised licence plate, approx 160 x 360 x 160cm
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Silence, 2014, drums, metal, hessian, gloves and wood, installation dimensions variable
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Charlie Chaplin, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 100 x 50cm Untitled: Scarecrow, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 180 x 170cm
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When things fall apart, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 239 x 110cm Mowgli and Bagheera, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 80 x 49cm
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You come closer, I will jump Performance with Sarah Grace Potter and Zwelakhe Khuse, 29 May 2014, Stevenson, Cape Town
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Amehlo akaphakelani , 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 60 x 51cm Portrait of Saddam, 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 85 x 85cm
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A Homage to the Magicians, performance with Buhle Siwani, 27 November 2014, Stevenson, Cape Town The Mythology of the Rape, 2014, cow dung, earth, buttons and oil on canvas, 151 x 180cm
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Untitled, 2014, diptych, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 90 x 90cm each A Homage to the Magicians, performance with Buhle Siwani, 27 November 2014, Stevenson, Cape Town
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The Problem We Didn't Create (The Death of Socrates) 2014, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 170 x 241.5cm
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Rope Trick, 2015, wood and rope, dimensions variable
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Usoze, 2015, mud and mud bricks, dimensions variable Performance with Ayanda Charlie and Ondela Simakuhle, 16 April 2015, Stevenson, Cape Town
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Tenacity/Audacity, 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 90.5 x 60.5cm People need to be controlled (The Fall), 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 60.5 x 90cm
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Intsimbi ayigobi, 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 90.5 x 60.5cm A Moment in the Millions, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 160 x 160cm
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Untitled (Memory), 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 91 x 150cm
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Makaveli, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 152 x 91cm Destroy This Mad Brute (Caliban and Miranda): The End of an Allegory 2015, cow dung, gesso and oil on canvas, 150 x 90cm
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Dangerous truths, 2015, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 60.5 x 90.5cm Suicide Note (The Honey Trap), 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 150.5 x 90.5cm
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Kiss my Ass, 2014, cow dung, earth, gesso and oil on canvas, 170 x 240.5cm
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Coup d'État I, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 150 x 90.5cm Coup d’État II, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 149.5 x 91.5cm
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I demand that you assassinate me, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 150 x 90.5cm
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Martyrdom: Gaddafi, 2014, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 85.5 x 85cm
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Untitled (Gothic), 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 134 x 92cm
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The execution style, 2015, diptych, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 149.5 x 90cm
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Runaway, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 150 x 91cm They Don’t Give a Fuck About Us, 2015, cow dung, earth and oil on canvas, 131.5 x 77.5cm
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Anglophone/Francophone, 2015, two-channel video installation, durations 2 min and 2 min 15 sec
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Untitled: Reason over passion, 2010, oil on linen, 86 x 86cm
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THE PROBLEM WE DIDN’T CREATE MAWANDE KA ZENZILE
First of all, I would like to pose a few questions as a brain
experience of the world. Through my work, I engage
exercise. The first one is: does a spade always mean a shovel
politics, memory, violence, history, colonial legacies, and
used to dig soil? Does a ‘painting’ of a smoking pipe made
the notions of space and time. I constantly aim to negate
from cow dung and oil paint on canvas necessarily invite us
stereotypes imposed on my work. Each and every artistic
to think about a Magritte? These are the questions I hoped
process I engage with is a continuous deconstruction of the
the audience would reflect on while confronted by my huge
ideologies and limitations I find imposed on me by the world.
paintings and piles of sticks in my exhibition, Statecraft. Sometimes in my work I like to confuse people; I
I’m against the belief or assumption that contemporary art practice is affected mainly by a singular genealogy of
intentionally conceal the meaning of the work. I do this by
art history and epistemic methodologies, as if being taught
giving the works ambiguous titles that have no obvious links
or teaching inside an art institution gives one the birth right
to my ‘true’ intentions. But sometimes I use the titles as
to understand or become an expert in all forms of visual
clues for the audience to access the work through.
aesthetics and cultures. This belief limits other possibilities
Primarily in my work, I draw attention to my heritage as a conceptual and a contextual frame of reference for my artistic practices. But my work is also a fusion of references
of understanding the material culture of the art object or the artist’s creative processes. Appearing continuously in my work for example, are
and motifs from different sources including Western
woodpiles/igoqo1, a motif which is intended to challenge the
art history, popular culture, literature and my personal
viewer to engage with the artwork’s material culture. Igoqo
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in its original context is viewed as an aesthetic form. The reading of the work therefore lies in the understanding of its contextual meaning. In the work titled Ikati elel’eziko (2013), one sees igoqo
some is a conscious reflection of the realities of our times. Cow dung is traditionally smeared onto the floors of the houses in Eastern Cape and is used as a binder when building mud houses. It too has an aesthetic quality that
and, on display on the wall nearby, a family portrait with my
attracted me to using it in my art. Cow dung has become a
mother, father and my older brother Thanduxolo. The image
predominant cultural material in my work and a language
is a reproduction of the original photo which was taken a
to communicate with creatively. I start this creative process
long time ago. It is the only photo we have of our father.
by selecting an image or images from my own memory or
Some got lost and most of them were destroyed by our
from popular culture. Then I begin with a charcoal drawing
uncle after our father passed away. This work was from an
onto a primed/unprimed canvas surface. If it’s an image
autobiographical graduate exhibition at Michaelis School of
from popular culture or an art historical reference, I don’t
Fine Art, University of Cape Town, entitled Center Ring. The
just mimic the sourced image, I fabricate its composition
igoqo is a representation of my mother’s strength, weakness
and colour in my work. The image then takes on a new life
and tenacity, raising three young men and a daughter
in a new context.
alone after our father passed away in a violent ambush by
Cow dung is a natural pigmentation and when it’s mixed
a group of taxi drivers in a taxi conflict. This phenomenon
with other pigments it transforms the colour palette of my
of violence recurs in my work. Most of it is unconscious, and
work and I attain a greater range of colours, which are not
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Bat girl, Now I become death the destroyer of the world, Zangief, What does that matter (Fuck Avantgarde), Bling Bling: The invisible hand, all 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 50 x 50cm
necessarily based on the principle of the colour wheel that
contrast two atrocities: one involves white people inside
is rooted in Western art history or its visual schemas.
a luxury cruise ship and the other involved black people
But sometimes I contrast the cow dung mixtures with oil
inside a slave ship. I was commenting on the basis that
paint colours and consciously allow an aesthetic dichotomy
race plays a role in the representation and suppression
to unfold. With this process I achieve contrasting surfaces,
of historical memories concerning violence perpetuated
which sometimes are in co-operation with one another and
towards Africans and Europeans.
sometimes repel one another. My practice deals with history in a similar way to how
My recent project, Statecraft, interrogates how the construction or deconstruction of a nation state is facilitated
I deal with visual cultures because I believe that images,
ideologically by the use of images as a form of propaganda
just like words or written history, are not used only to
or to sway people’s imagination and to control them. Edward
document historical events but also to maintain, propagate
Bernays coined the term ‘public relations’, inspired by
and/or to problematise history. In my previous exhibitions,
Sigmund Freud’s theories of the human mind’s susceptibility
I engaged critically with images and their histories. Titanic
to persuasion. The work The Problem We Didn’t Create (The
I/II (2013), another work from my graduate exhibition,
Death of Socrates) recalls a neoclassic work, The Death of
portrayed a simplified diagram of the iconographic slave
Socrates (1787), a painting by Jacques-Louis David. I am
ship in cow dung and oil paint. The Titanic was a ship that
using David’s representation of Socrates’ death as a catalyst
sank in the North Atlantic Ocean in 1912. In this work I
in my own work to comment on conventional ways of
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The commodity (Exotic), Untitled: Two hooded man, both 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 50 x 50cm
interpreting contemporary works of art. The disciples around the dying Socrates are removed from my painting and are replaced by a smoking pipe from Xhosa heritage on a paint and cow dung background. This
pipe (inqawe). The smoking pipe’s motif, as in the painting described before, signifies death, and it is this dichotomy of signs which make the reading of the work possible. To access meaning in these works, I would like the
symbolic gesture of introducing the smoking pipe onto the
viewers to challenge themselves to understand the
cow dung picture plane shifts the meaning of the primary
dichotomies within and to respond not only to the formal
source. The smoking pipe, a motif from my early work which
features of Western aesthetics, but through visual and
references a Xhosa idiom known as ukubeka inqawe (that
material references specific to the cultural experience that
loosely translates as putting down a smoking pipe), implies
informs my creativity, and how they relate to each
that someone has passed away/died.
other or not.
Inqawe: Series (2013) is intended to draw attention
And lastly, I would also like to acknowledge the
to the Berlin Conference of 1885, where Britain, France,
contingent nature of art making and its mysteries. Joseph
Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Germany and Italy literally drew
Beuys once performed the role of himself, the artist, and
maps onto the land and shared the continent amongst
at the same instance the role of art historian/art critic, in
themselves without any Africans’ involvement. In my
his famous performance titled How to Explain Pictures to
practice, each of the country’s national flags is printed on
a Dead Hare. The hare is the only spectator since the real
wallpaper, and on top of each flag I’ve placed a smoking
art goers were locked outside the gallery by the artist.
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Head of an anonymous moor, 2011, cow dung and oil on canvas, 86 x 86cm
In this performance piece Beuys appeared with his face
theoretical justifications of this critical standpoint today is
painted with gold leaf and beeswax and he is holding a
the argument of Roland Barthes’ The Death of the Author
dead hare and playing with the hare’s lifeless organs. What
published in 1967. This is precisely the problem we didn’t
is he trying to tell us here? Could it be he, the artist, who’s
create, the ideological problem we are forced to inherit,
mad, trying to explain something and communicate with
the problem of violence: wars, ecological disasters, racism,
a dead animal? Is he trying to tell his audience something
sexism and all manmade prejudices and injustices.
impossible to articulate in words? Or is he saying that the art historians or art critics are ignorant or perhaps mad by trying to rationalise something beyond their intellectual capacity? Does the hare represent the ignorance of his audience? Who is the protagonist here and who is the antagonist? Whose problem is it to make people understand art? The reality is that most people who write about art don’t make art and their opinions matters more than those of the art maker. The artist, his creative process and the art object run the risk of being nullified. The most popular argument or ideology amongst all
1 I goqo is material culture, a structure that represents women within the Xhosa communities, mostly found in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The igoqo loosely translates in English as woodpile.
MAWANDE KA ZENZILE was born in Lady Frere, Eastern Cape, in 1986. He graduated with a BA Fine Art from the Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town, in 2014. He won the Tollman Award for Visual Art in 2014 and the Michaelis Prize in 2013. Previous solo exhibitions are Experimentation: All Hell Break Loose at Stevenson, Cape Town (2014); Autobiography of Mawande Ka Zenzile: Iingcuka ezombethe iimfele zeegusha at Vansa, Cape Town (2011) and Crawling Nation at the AVA, Cape Town (2009). Group exhibitions include Between the Lines at the Michaelis Galleries (2013); Umahluko at Lookout Hill (as part of Cape 09) and X Marks the Spot at the AVA (2008). In 2014 he completed a residency at Nafasi Art Space, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; he was awarded a residency in Norway in 2008 as part of the Abazobi project, organised by the Arkivet Foundation and the Robben Island Museum. Ka Zenzile has been a regular participant in academic conferences including Between the Lines at the Michaelis School of Fine Art and Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig (2013); The Exuberant Project, Gordon Institute for Performing and Creative Arts, University of Cape Town (2012) and Thinking Africa + Diaspora Differently at the Centre for
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African Studies, University of Cape Town (2011). Many of these projects have been accompanied by his performances.
© 2015 for work and text: Mawande Ka Zenzile Cover Black man you are on your own, 2014, cow dung and oil on canvas, 170 x 240cm Design Gabrielle Guy Photography Mario Todeschini Printing Hansa Print, Cape Town