1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair New York
9 to 11 May 2025
Halo, 28 Liberty Street, New York
At Berman Contemporary’s booth Hazel Mphande and Athenkosi Kwinana, share a space shaped by contemplation, confrontation, and care. Together they offer not answers, but questions, urgent, necessary ones, about how we remember, how we see, and how we become.
Find us at booth 8 from 9 to 11 May 2025 at Halo, 28 Liberty Street, NYC.
At Berman Contemporary’s booth for the 2025 edition of the 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair in New York, two powerful artistic voices, Hazel Mphande and Athenkosi Kwinana, share a space shaped by contemplation, confrontation, and care. Though working in different mediums, Mphande through photographic abstraction and Kwinana through figurative drawing, both artists delve into inner landscapes of trauma, memory, and identity. Their works reflect on the fragility of the human psyche and body, while asserting presence, resilience, and community.
Rather than collide, their practices interweave, creating a compelling dialogue about contemporary African identity through deeply introspective and political lenses. While maintaining distinct aesthetic languages, the artists offer a dual narrative of survival, transformation, and visibility.
Athenkosi Kwinana’s practice emerges from a deeply personal yet critical space. As a South African woman with Albinism, she confronts the violent intersections of race, disability, and marginalization. Her series Septemb24k centers the life and memory of Gabisile Shabane, a 13-year-old girl with Albinism who was abducted and murdered in 2018, a tragedy rooted in harmful superstitions that becomes a central point of inquiry.
Working in coloured pencil, Kwinana produces intimate yet monumental portraits that challenge reductive representations of persons with albinism (PWA). Influenced by the photographic legacies of artists like Alberto Korda, she uses the gaze as a tool of reclamation. Her subjects meet the viewer directly, asserting agency, dignity, and humanity.
Her incorporation of Cuban architectural motifs and household tile patterns reflects how spatial and emotional environments shape identity. Kwinana’s time in Cuba expanded her aesthetic and conceptual framework, moving her practice beyond the self-portrait toward a broader, inclusive portrayal of PWA. Her drawings become acts of resistance, reclaiming visibility through care, precision, and power.
Hazel Mphande, by contrast, explores the intangible and psychological. Her body of work, The Unfurling, is a visual diary of emotional disintegration and resilience. Through long shutter speeds, double exposures, and grainy textures, she reveals inner states of flux and fracture, drawing from her lived experience with clinical depression and her refusal to separate the personal from the political.
Raised in a Black, religious household where mental illness was taboo, Mphande’s photographs offer a raw, unsettling reflection on living through trauma while processing it in real time. Her images don’t depict literal memories, but emotional echoes, blurred figures, spectral landscapes, and dissolving forms. Her recent turn to landscape photography questions whether nature itself can serve as a self-portrait, further expanding her exploration of identity and presence.
Mphande’s aesthetic is intentionally disorienting, mimicking memory loss, psychosis, and sensory overload. Rather than confront, her work envelops the viewer, inviting them into a quiet, immersive experience of ambiguity and healing. It asks: What does it mean to come undone? What does healing look like in motion?
Together, Kwinana and Mphande interrogate interior realities, emotional and psychological states that often elude language. They explore identity as fluid and shaped by forces beyond the self. Their practices root personal experience within broader political frameworks, whether the lived reality of albinism or generational trauma around mental health.
Kwinana is direct, precise, and confrontational; Mphande is abstract, atmospheric, and introspective. One demands to be seen; the other lingers in the unseen. Yet both offer nuanced forms of visibility, one literal, the other emotional.
Their pairing poses a powerful answer to what defines contemporary African art today. It is not bound by subject or material, but by voice, agency, and vision. These artists are not illustrating trauma; they are re-authoring it, excavating and healing through image-making.
Their work engages global conversations, on mental health, intersectionality, and postcolonial critique, while remaining deeply rooted in South African experience. They represent a generation of African artists who move beyond reaction toward reimagination, placing complexity, vulnerability, and multiplicity at the center.
Berman Contemporary presents the booth as both a psychic and visual terrain, a space of rupture and connection, where viewers move between visibility and obscurity, figuration and abstraction. It is not just an exhibition of two artists, but a convergence of practices, where new meanings emerge in the space between them.
Together, Mphande and Kwinana offer not answers, but questions, urgent, necessary ones, about how we remember, how we see, and how we become.