Posted on Tuesday 12-06-2007
A solo exhibition by Nandipha Mntambo
16 August - 15 September 2007
Michael Stevenson is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of rising star Nandipha Mntambo. Born in
Mntambo has developed a distinctive aesthetic through her use of cowhide, which she tans and moulds onto casts of the female body - usually her own. She purchases the hide as raw as possible in order to engage fully with the material - its smell and textures causing revulsion but also provoking a consciousness of the corporeal. The hairy skin, cast in female form, is used, Mntambo says, to "challenge and subvert preconceptions regarding representation of the female body", and to "disrupt perceptions of attraction and repulsion".
The fragments of forms - torsos, faces, ears - are suspended in particular configurations, on their own
or in relation to each other. Among the works on show will be The Fighters, in which two figures - outlined respectively in black and tan skins - are hung in dynamic confrontation with each other; Lelive lami, a floor-length dress complete with a myriad cow's tails for a train; and Indlovukati, in which a single pale-coloured skin sensuously delineates the back and buttocks of a majestic, ghost-like woman.
Mntambo writes: "Through the interpretation of my own and my mother's bodies, I have taken control of their representation, and directed the way in which viewers encounter these forms in both their material realisation and installation. The figures, although hanging, have assertiveness in their posture and are intended to be sensuous but ambiguous in their presence. While these fragments of female form may elicit repulsion, it is repulsion intended to evoke the residue of life and the actual presence of the corporeal rather than the female body as victim, damaged, abused or abject." (To read the full text from which this is excerpted, click here.)
Mntambo's Beginning of the Empire, a series of figures based on her mother's body, has been selected for the upcoming exhibition Local Racism, Global Apartheid.
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