Monday, August 12, 2013

Arts that leaves you in bewilderment

 
As arts and culture continues to evolve in today’s world  we see various mediums of painting and sculpting where the artists creates new forms of art but the issues of originality and creativity often arises. This write up takes a peep into the strange balance that exists between the intensely macabre and the bizarrely beautiful in artist Nandipha Mntambo’s oeuvre. Invariably it leaves you haunted yet in awe of her distinctive aesthetic and technique that combines the use of cowhides, and hair with clever juxtaposition and positioning. One can only interpret her work as it is, a spectacle that leaves you repulsed or that piques your interest for the grotesque, yet profound. The artist brings issues of identity and conflict to the forefront, and she frequently addresses the dynamic tension that exists within the self, the push-pull between libido and mortido, life instinct and death drive. Concepts of powerlessness versus empowerment, the public versus the private selves, or the presentation of unexpected role reversals have arisen in some of her latest bodies of work.
Born in Swaziland in 1982 and raised in South Africa, Mntambo is a sculptor who has made cowhide her medium of choice.  Her choice is inspired and informed on one hand by a childhood dream where she found herself left with a pile of cowhides and on the other by her interest in science and forensics, which was her first passion before she decided to become an artist.
“I enjoy chemical processes. I was never really interested in ‘conventional’ materials and was lucky enough to have the opportunity to work with a taxidermist for a while. The thin line that exists between our understanding of attraction and repulsion has always been of interest to me. I developed my aesthetic in an attempt to destabilise/push this boundary while challenging how art material and the product are understood.”
 In describing the artist media, Gabi Ngcobo, in Art South Africa vol 04, issue 03, 2006 said “It is a material variously associated with wealth and power. The literal hairiness of her figures also functions as a distancing device... Her work encourages us to critique the politics and aesthetics of femininity and beauty and is suggestive of the ways in which (black) women are re-interpreting their bodies and claiming visibility.'
 She uses plaster moulds of her own body and envelops them with the still malleable cowhide that she has thoroughly treated and cured.  The hide becomes a beautiful and repulsive empty floating carrier. These hairy feminine shapes defy our notion of feminine beauty. The artist remembers her early years at Floating Figures, girls’ school where there was so much focus on getting rid of body hair. With her haunting simultaneously human and animal like, she deliberately seeks to provoke a sense of agitation. 
 She describes her use of cowhide “as a means to subvert expected associations with corporeal presence, femininity, sexuality and vulnerability.”  The animal/human association is not new but rarely has it been so provocative. The cowhides seem to be worn as garments caught in movement. As Mntambo explains, the many folds and creases were inspired by the move of the dress worn by a woman dancing the Paso Doble with her partner. She defines herself as existing between several worlds, and refuses to be located in one particular identity. Cowhide is a conceptually loaded substance and to mistake the (often dark) cowhide with the female figure is a contentious practice, which might arguably naturalize the ideological metonymy of women, blackness and nature. Other readings of Mntambo's work have centred on the traditional practice of 'ilobola' [bride-price] in South Africa, which is often criticised by feminists for reducing women to the level of possessions. Although these issues do play a part in Mntambo's attraction to the medium, it is reductive to read her production only in these terms. In filling out the vacated body of the cow with different forms, then vacating it again or re-embodying it herself, Mntambo utilizes the semantic layering embedded in her material to flesh out, exaggerate and ultimately - I would argue - deflate the terms which have kept people in subjugated states of embodiment. The quasi-scientific arguments which backed up the discourse of racism and sexism have long been discredited; however, their semantic legacy continues to haunt contemporary culture. It is this ghosting that Mntambo points to with her evocative and alluring sculptures.
“My work was never meant to be a direct exploration of the African Female body. I just happen to be African and female and use my body in my art making process.” She said.
 Mntambo addresses issues of gender, which are also at the core of her work.  She has more recently expanded her work to include video and photography where she explores further associations tied to the cow iconography.  The videos, which is be her first foray into the medium, translates her interest in femininity and cows into a cross-gender foray into bulls and the masculine arena of the bull-fight. It shows Mntambo as a matador in a deserted bull-fighting arena. She enacts a phantasmagoria bull-fight, making herself both the subject and the object of the work.
 Mythology plays an important part and helps position her work in a broader geographical context.


Nandipha Mntambo completed a Master of Fine Arts from the Michaelis School of Fine Arts at the University of Cape Town. She was the 2011 Standard Bank Young Artist Award winner for visual arts and she has been shown in group shows in the US, Europe, Africa, and Australia.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Morals gone sour by Oliver Onuoha



The recognition of same-sex marriages is a political, social, moral, and religious issue in many nations, whereby civil, equal, and human rights are pertinent. Debates arise over whether same-sex couples should be allowed to enter into marriage.
It is unimaginable and weird as to how this moral indecency has taken over and gone viral whereby most churches now see nothing wrong in this abominable act which the bible condemns and I quote “Lev. 18:22, "You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a female; it is an abomination”.
Where are our moral values? Where is the fear of God in these last days? Do we even expect that Christ will come again and the world will one day come to an end and all souls return to their maker?
The united States of America which I was once proud of and loved the slogan on its powerful currency, “In God We trust’ seems to be the chief culprit and forerunner in the establishment of gay right as enthroned in their Federal Constitution.  Most countries in South America, Europe and even Africa have established gay rights as a legal form of marriage. Australia recognizes same-sex marriages only if one partner has had gender reassignment therapy.
A prominent gay rights activist in Cameroon Eric Ohena Lembembe, was recently found tortured and killed in his home, amid claims the authorities have systematically ignored similar attacks in the country.
Some analysts state that financial, psychological and physical well-being are enhanced by marriage, and that children of same-sex couples benefit from being raised by two parents within a legally recognized union supported by society's institutions
I wonder if we now have fewer women around or men or the women are now too hard to get, vise versa.
Sex is a beautiful act created by God between a man and a woman and not the reverse which opposes to gay rights. Let me tell you a story. I was in a club with a friend who visited me in South Africa. While having our drinks and enjoying the evening, a guy came dancing and eyeing me from nowhere. He tried flirting with me as a normal lady would. I had ignored him with a stern look and he got the message and walked away.  I would say even animals that are not sensible as we humans are don’t even involve in this abominable referred to as been gay.
This is a clear sign that the world is ending and people have become reprobates in nature.
I salute countries who frowns at homosexuality making it illegal es criminalising consensual sex between homosexual adults, and four punishing homosexuality by death.
In some countries, there are moves to increase criminal sanctions for homosexuality. Nigeria, which shares a border with Cameroon, has introduced a bill against gay marriage, while Ghana has reacted furiously to statements by the Britis prime minsiter, David Cameron, linking aid to a country's stance on homosexual rights.





Monday, April 15, 2013

XtraMiles: The blade runner goes partying

XtraMiles: The blade runner goes partying: South African Paralympian sprint star Oscar Pistorius was spotted partying last weekend at a trendy Johannesburg hangout, his first out...

The blade runner goes partying


South African Paralympian sprint star Oscar Pistorius was spotted partying last weekend at a trendy Johannesburg hangout, his first outing with friends since his arrest for the Valentine's Day killing of his girlfriend, media reported on Sunday.
According to a Sunday Times report, a "relaxed-looking" Pistorius was seen knocking back drinks at a party at an upmarket restaurant last Saturday, but did not stay long.
His publicist, Anneliese Burgess said the sprinter left the venue when "public interest became overwhelming". According to Burgess he then moved on to another restaurant but left for the same reason.
"The place went quiet when people realised it was Oscar and [the mood] never really recovered from there," a restaurant manager told the Sunday Times.
One patron of the restaurant said the double amputee, known as "Blade Runner" was seen downing shooters and being "flirtatious" before leaving.
"He was greeting a couple and then gave the woman a little pat on her backside. It was just so inappropriate," said the woman.
The paper reported that Pistorius was at the first restaurant in a group that included a wealthy businessman friend. They were watched over by bodyguards.
Burgess said the outing was a way of "trying to reconnect with friends of his and Reeva's."
Pistorius, 26, whose athletics career has been on hold since he was arrested for shooting dead 29-year-old Reeva Steenkamp, has kept a low profile since he was released on bail on February 22.
The runner claims that he shot Steenkamp through a locked bathroom door in the dead of the night, after having mistaken her for an intruder. He is facing a charge of pre-meditated murder.
Last month he successfully challenged his strict bail conditions, including travel restrictions and alcohol consumption.
The athlete returns to court on June 4.
Courtesy of yahoo news.