Exhibition
Figures & Fictions Victoria & Albert Museum

Messina/Musina Pieter and Maryna Vermeulen with Timana Phosiwa, 2006 © Pieter Hugo. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town & Yossi Milo, New York

Natasja Fourie Fig 1, 2010 © courtesy of Roelof Petrus van Wyk

Springfontein, 2006 © Graeme Williams

Tumi Mokgosi, Yeoville, Johannesburg © Zanele Muholi. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town

Martin Machapa, 2006 © Zanele Muholi. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town

Untitled (From The Brave Ones series) © Zwelethu Mthethwa courtesy of Jack Shainman Gallery, New York

Berni Searle, Once Removed (Head I) 2008 © Berni Searle. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town

David Goldblatt, Zimbabwe refugees taking shelter in the Central Methodist Church © David Goldblatt Courtesy of the artist and Goodman Gallery

Hasan & Husain Essop, Night Before Eid, 2009 Courtesy of the artist and Goodman Gallery

Jo Ractliffe, School girls’ uniforms, Roque Santeiro, 2007 © Jo Ractliffe. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town

Kudzanai Chiurai, The Minister of Finance, 2009 Courtesy of the artist and Goodman Gallery

Nonsikelelo Veleko, Sibu IV, 2003/2006 Courtesy of the artist and Goodman Gallery

Sabelo Mlangeni, Palisa, 2009 © Sabelo Mlangeni. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town

Mikhael Subotzky, Street Party, Saxonwold, 2008 © Mikhael Subotzky Courtesy of the Goodman Gallery

Terry Kurgan, Robert Madamalala, 2004 Courtesy of Terry Kurgan

Santu Mofokeng, Nousta, Rister and Noupa Mkansi at home in Dan, from the series Child-headed Households © Santu Mofokeng. Image courtesy of Lunetta Bartz, MAKER
Messina/Musina Pieter and Maryna Vermeulen with Timana Phosiwa, 2006 © Pieter Hugo. Courtesy of Michael Stevenson, Cape Town & Yossi Milo, New York
Figures & Fictions: Contemporary South African Photography highlights the work of 17 South African photographers, all of whom live and work in the country and whose images were made between 2000 and 2010. Each photographer is represented by one or more projects that are linked by the depiction of people and a self-conscious engagement with South Africa’s political and photographic past.
Photographs showing figures raise pertinent issues of identity: how the gaze of the camera, photographer and viewer is returned by the subject, and the balance of power which that interaction implies. The ‘figure’ also implies not only the human figure but also the metaphorically figurative. Photographs can be like a ‘figure’ of speech, composed of familiar words but containing an ambiguity between literal and figurative interpretation.
As the Fictions part of this exhibition’s title suggests, it points not just to the geographical and social specificity of these photographs but also to the enigmatic relationship with the ‘real’ world that they seem to depict. A photograph is always a translation, distillation or filter of reality seen from the physical and conceptual standpoint of the person creating the image – as well as that of the viewer.
Many of the works shown in the exhibition are extracts from extended essayistic sequences, but can nevertheless be understood as fragments containing the essence of the whole. Many of the photographers’ series address, among other concerns: the threshold between documentary photography and fine art practice; the balance of the specific and the universal and the dialogue between the local and the global.
The excitement and urgency surrounding photography in South Africa today is partly explained by its local context: embedded in colonial history, ethnography, anthropology, journalism and political activism, the best photography emerging from the country has absorbed and grapples with its weighty history, questioning, manipulating and revivifying its visual codes and blending them with contemporary concerns. Post-Apartheid, complex and fundamental issues – race, society, gender, identity – remain very much on the surface. This is reflected by image makers who harness the resulting scenes as a form of creative tension within their personal vision. Here, distinctive photographic voices have emerged: local in character and subject matter, but of wider international interest because of their combined intensity.
(Press release)
Until July 17
V&A South Kensington
Cromwell Road
London SW7 2RL
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