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Memo
Deborah Bell, Robert Hodgins, William Kentridge
Artwork 1994
Artwork: Deborah Bell, Robert Hodgins and William Kentridge, Memo (1994). Video. 3 min. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery.
Artist Deborah Bell, Robert Hodgins, William Kentridge Title Memo Date 1994 Materials Video Dimensions 3 min Credit Courtesy of Goodman Gallery

This artwork was loaned to the exhibition Dada South? Experimentation, Radicalism and Resistance curated by Kathryn Smith and Roger van Wyk, Iziko South Africa National Gallery, December 12, 2009–February 28, 2010. It is indexed here as part of Smith and Van Wyk’s revisiting of the Dada South? Archive of materials at A4 Arts Foundation.

b.1957, Johannesburg

b.1920, Dulwich; d.2010, Johannesburg

"For me,” the late Robert Hodgins said, “it is very simple. The act of painting at a particular moment is able, for reasons I neither understand, nor even try to understand, to open up the whole world of my experience, my thinking, my aspirations." It was only after Hodgins retired in the mid-80s, and took up painting full-time, that he established himself as a prominent and prolific artist. His paintings are saturated with the tumult of the time; his career as painter beginning in the final, violent decade of apartheid. His work offers not the didactic figuration of resistance art, but rather a nuanced reflection on all-too-human failings. At once expressive and spare, Hodgins’ paintings lean toward abstraction with an economy of both line and pigment. His painted scenes have about them – as the critic Ivor Powell wrote – an “unbeautiful simplification,” a feeling for abbreviation, for suggestion rather than illustration.

b.1955, Johannesburg

Performing the character of the artist working on the stage (in the world) of the studio, William Kentridge centres art-making as primary action, preoccupation, and plot. Appearing across mediums as his own best actor, he draws an autobiography in walks across pages of notebooks, megaphones shouting poetry as propaganda, making a song and dance in his studio as chief conjuror in a creative play. Looking at his work, a ceaseless output and extraordinary contribution to the South African cultural landscape, one finds a repetition of people, places and histories: the city of Johannesburg, a white stinkwood tree in the garden of his childhood home (one of two planted when he was nine years old), his father (Sir Sydney Kentridge) and mother (Felicia Kentridge), both of whom contributed greatly to the dissolution of apartheid as lawyers and activists. The Kentridge home, where the artist still lives today, was populated in his childhood by his parents’ artist friends and political collaborators, a milieu that proved formative in his ongoing engagement with world histories of expansionism and oppression throughout the 20th century. Parallel to – or rather, entangled with – these reflections is an enquiry into art historical movements, particularly those that press language to unexpected ends, such as Dada, Constructivism and Surrealism.

Moving dextrously from the particular and personal to the global political terrain, Kentridge returns to metabolise these findings in the working home of the artist’s studio, where the practitioner is staged as a public figure making visible his modes of investigation. Celebrated as a leading artist of the 21st century, Kentridge is the artistic director of operas and orchestras, from Sydney to London to Paris to New York to Cape Town, known for his collaborative way of working that prioritises thinking together with fellow practitioners skilled in their disciplines (for example, as composers, as dancers). Most often, he is someone who draws, in charcoal, in pencil and pencil crayon, in ink, the gestures and mark-making assured. In a collection of books for which A4 acted as custodian during the exhibition History on One Leg, one finds 200 publications devoted to Kentridge’s practice. In the end, he has said, the work that emerges is who you are.

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