about us
 
contact us
 
login
 
newsletter
 
facebook
 
 
home hongkong beijing shanghai taipei tokyo seoul singapore
more  
search     
art in asia   |   galleries   |   artists   |   artworks   |   events   |   art institutions   |   art services   |   art scene   |   blogs

Enlarge
What We See & What We Know
by The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
Location: Special Exhibition Gallery of the Museum
Artist(s): William KENTRIDGE
Date: 2 Jan - 14 Feb 2010

About the Exhibition

 

William Kentridge (b. 1955 in South Africa, based in Johannesburg) began creating his signature ‘drawings in motion’ in the late 1980s. These animated works are created through the laborious process of photographing charcoal-and-pastel drawings with a 35mm motion picture camera, adding new marks and erasures frame by frame to make the drawings ‘move.’ As a continuous record of ceaselessly changing drawings, marks that could not be erased completely are left behind as the animation progresses. These indelible marks contribute a stately air to his expression that could be described as the accumulation of time itself.

 

Kentridge's works are deeply affected by the history and contemporary social circumstances of South Africa, and his series of films entitled 9 Drawings for Projection, imbued with the pain inflicted by his country's history of apartheid, have drawn a great deal of attention from all over the world — beginning with such exhibitions as the Johannesburg Biennale in 1995 or Documenta X in 1997 — as an artistic expression/practice of anti-Eurocentric postcolonial criticism. However, a closer reading shows that, beyond their sociopolitical appearances, Kentridge's works have consistently been engaged in the verification and storytelling of the universal and primordial issues faced by humans in the modern age: the good intentions and the collapse of an individual in his or her resistance to the status quo; the ambiguity of protection and oppression; the effort to reintegrate one's fragmented self and the impossibility of doing so; and so on.

 

The artist's persistent use of the simple technique that he himself has called “stone-age filmmaking” could also be understood as a result of his intent to seek the origins of modern narrative creation, or to uncover the pathology of colonialism from within the Enlightenment as he travels back through history. His unsophisticated animation technique stands in direct opposition to the contemporary mainstream of sophisticated cel and computer-generated animation. The extremely original and powerful expression of his works, however, demonstrate that old-fashioned hand-drawn animation on paper still holds an enormous potential as an expressive medium, and his works have influenced younger generations of artists since the early 1990s.

 

William Kentridge is one of the most closely watched artists in the world, with a large-scale international exhibition that opened at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in March 2009, subsequently traveling to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (Texas), the Norton Museum of Art (West Palm Beach, Florida), the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Albertina (Vienna), the Israel Museum (Jerusalem), and the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam).

 

The Japanese exhibition — Kentridge's first solo exhibition in the country — is the result of three years of close work between the Museums and the artist himself. 19 film works (including 4 film installations), 36 drawings, and 63 prints will be exhibited, covering the full scope of Kentridge's artistic activities, from the 9 Drawings for Projection (1989-2003), a representative body of work that is centered on the history of South Africa, to I Am Not Me, the Horse Is Not Mine (2008), his latest work based on the Shostakovich opera The Nose.

 

About the Artist

 

Profile

Born in 1955. Lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Studied Politics, African Studies, and Fine Arts in Johnnesburg, and mime and theatre in Paris.

Begins creating and presenting hand-drawn animated films-composed of charcoal and pastel drawings photographed with a 35mm motion picture camera-at the end of the 1980s. Creates works full of poetic sentiment that address the past and present of his homeland, including apartheid.

Exhibited at Documenta 10 (1997), the São Paulo Art Biennial (1998), the Venice Biennale (1999), the Carnegie International (1999/2000), the Kwangju Biennale (2000), the Yokohama Triennale (2001), Documenta 11 (2002), the Biennale of Sydney (2008), etc.

Recent exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Art, currently traveling to Fort Worth, West Palm Beach (Florida), New York, Vienna, Jerusalem, and Amsterdam through 2009-11.

Works in a variety of fields, including acting, stage direction, and writing.

website
Digg Delicious Facebook Share to friend
 

© 2007 - 2024 artinasia.com