Artists:
Asemahle Ntlonti
Kyle Morland
Roundtable participants:
Jean-Marié Malan
Anelisa Ntlonti
Sean O'Toole
Josh Ginsburg
Sara de Beer
Nkhensani Mkhari
Mitchell Gilbert Messina
Practitioners are invited to measure, mend, test, archive, and make, working in parallel with artist colleagues to create mobile studios in the gallery in between A4’s quarterly exhibitions programme.
For this second iteration of Parallel Play, artists Asemahle Ntlonti and Kyle Morland work alongside one another. This culminated in a Live Harvest roundtable engagement, from which the following excerpts of conversation emerged:
"Is play detective work or is it about surprise?" – Sean O'Toole
"Sustained practice without knowing where the works will be exhibited or not allows for flexibility towards resolution. Working for the sake of working is its own achievement, not an intended, predicted outcome." – Jean-Marié Malan
"In both Kyle and Asemahle’s practices, there’s a shared engagement with the multiple – with assemblage and collage. There are so many different things happening, and opportunities for things to happen in ways other than what they were initially intended." – Sara de Beer
"I haven’t had the confidence yet to really play with colour. Seeing Asemahle’s work with collage, and the depth that colour gives to flat works, tearing up different colours and seeing what works together. But both of us are working with various loose components, whether its assemblage or collage." – Kyle Morland
"Kyle’s work felt very performative to me. It’s almost as if they embody a body, as though they’re performing. The object itself tells you what is missing and leads you on your way." – Asemahle Ntlonti
"A target is a thing that one is driven to realise in all its precision. Then is the detritus; the tests that generate these beautiful objects along the way." – Josh Ginsburg
"Do you learn more about your work in its making – in the rehearsal – or in its performance, its appearing in the gallery and having people engage with it?" – Nkhensani Mkhari