Rain Shadows
Chrisél Attewell
28 January – 4 March 2023
Held at FADA gallery
University of Johannesburg Bunting Campus, 17 Bunting Road, Auckland Park, 2092
Welcome by Els van Mourik, senior art curator Berman Contemporary
Opening speech by Prof. Karen von Veh, followed by a discussion between
the artist Chrisél Attewell and her supervisor Karen von Veh, hosted by Els van Mourik.
Held at the UJ FADA Gallery in Johannesburg, RAIN SHADOWS is a solo exhibition of Chrisél Attewell as part of her Master’s degree. Over two years, Attewell has been researching the Cape landscape, its traumatic histories, and the threats of drought and desertification that it faces. These are global concerns mostly brought on by humanity’s negative impact on the planet’s ecologies. It is however not all of humanity that is to blame. Traumatic colonial and exploitative histories are entangled in the planet’s current ecological crises.
In this exhibition, Attewell engages with the concept of rain shadows both in a literal and metaphorical way. In the literal interpretation, a rain shadow is a landform that has become desertified due to mountain ranges that block rain clouds from passing over them. On one side of the mountain, healthy plant life can be found within wet weather systems, while the other side is forced to become a desert. Metaphorically, the rain shadow in this exhibition refers to the darker side of human history that divided people into those who prosper and those who suffer.
*This is an exhibition in partial fulfilment of the degree of Master of Arts in Visual Art, University of Johannesburg.
RAIN SHADOWS: A SOUNDSCAPE
Chrisél Attewell & Wesley West
With courtesy of Berman Contemporary
RAIN SHADOWS: A SOUNDSCAPE is an experimental collaboration between contemporary artist, Chrisél Attewell, and composer and musician, Wesley West. The album is made as part of Attewell’s upcoming Master’s exhibition, RAIN SHADOWS, that will take place from 28 January to 4 March 2023 at the UJ FADA Gallery in Johannesburg, South Africa. One floor of Attewell’s 2-level exhibition will feature an installation of her video works, which will be played alongside her and West’s sound piece.
In this exhibition, Attewell engages with the concept of rain shadows both in a literal and metaphorical way. In the literal interpretation, a rain shadow is a landform that has become desertified due to mountain ranges that block rain clouds from passing over them. On one side of the mountain, healthy plant life can be found within wet weather systems, while the other side is forced to become a desert. Metaphorically, the rain shadow in this exhibition refers to the darker side of human history that divided people into those who prosper and those who suffer.
Over two years, Attewell has been researching the Cape landscape, its traumatic histories, and the threats of drought and desertification that it faces. These are global concerns mostly brought on by humanity’s negative impact on the planet’s ecologies. It is however not all of humanity that is to blame. Traumatic colonial and exploitative histories are entangled in the planet’s current ecological crises.
The sound installation by Attewell and West is created with these histories and the current ecological crisis is made. The sounds in the album feature a variety of recordings that Attewell made in her studio and in the landscape. Many of the sounds are made from dried-out ocean corals, sponges, and shells that washed ashore on a Cape Town beach. Attewell argues that the number of dead and bleached ocean creatures found on the beach is a trace of a much larger problem related to the ocean’s health and the planet’s ecologies.
Other sounds in the album feature recordings of Attewell’s breathing, which is at times calm, and sometimes anxious. The rhythm of the breathing resonates especially well with Attewell’s video, The Water in our Breath, which shows an organic glowing orange shape that shrinks that reminds one simultaneously of the movement of a jellyfish, a lung breathing, and a heart pumping. The orange shape, in fact, is hot glass that Attewell is blowing over a river stone. Glass, Attewell argues, is a natural material made from sand, which through intense heat becomes glass. It is both an incredibly strong material if considering the violent process of its making, and an extremely fragile material that could break easily if mistreated.
West manipulated Attewell’s sounds with panning and warping and composed an original piano that takes the listener on a journey. At times the music sounds positive, curious, and even adventurous. Other times, it seems to be anxious or in mourning. The sounds made by the shells and ocean sponges at times sound like they could be a recording of rain, but in actuality, it can rather be considered as a shadow of rain. West explains that his use of the piano in the arrangements is in response to the themes addressed in Attewell’s work for the RAIN SHADOWS exhibition. The piano is an instrument capable of taking the listener on an emotional journey. It can be both clean and rhythmic, whilst also being emotional and nostalgic. West continues to say that while the music is melodic and mesmerising, it also has a shadow. The piano, West explains, with its history of social injustices and class divides, reminds him of the mountain ranges that divide the landscape into rich ecosystems and thirsty deserts.