-
"I am honoured to have spoken on the #PowerOfInclusivity panel about the importance of diversity and inclusion in disability-representation across art, film, and media at FAME Week Africa and MIP Markets. I am also grateful for the power team that
-
Chrisél Attewell recently returned from the Kommagene Biennale in Turkey. She created a collaborative installation titled Hand of Many. “In the wake of disaster, human hands are the first line of response. When structures crumble, these hands search through rubble, offering
-
Paballo Majela and Odette Graskie are invited to take part in, approximations to a voice: ellipsis, an exhibition curated by Jean Dreyer. The show will take place during the 2024 Free State Art Festival featured at the University of the
-
“I have a new episode in my ‘Remains of a conversation’ series. I had a conversation with artist Natalie de Morney. I wrote down what remained with me of our conversation after a few weeks. You can read these remains
-
Paballo Majela and Odette Graskie are invited to take part in, approximations to a voice: ellipsis, an exhibition curated by Jean Dreyer. The show will take place during the 2024 Free State Art Festival featured at the University of the Free State
-
BANDI WALK: One Step Closer to Our Earth In commemoration of the 2024 Korea-Africa Summit (June 4-5), the Korean Cultural Centre presents the Ecological Environment Special Exhibition, BANDI WALK: One Step Closer to Our Earth. ‘Bandi’, the Korean word for firefly,
-
On the 4th of June DuduBloom More was invited to the 2024 winner announcement of the prestigious Cassirer Welz Award hosted by Strauss & Co. and the Bag Factory Artist Studio to speak on a panel discussion about the award as a
Gina van der Ploeg
“In my search for a pliable, abundant medium that can be woven, the hyacinth presents unique opportunities both from an ecological and a material perspective. The hyacinth is an aggressively invasive aquatic plant originally from the Amazon which was introduced as an exotic pond plant in South Africa in the early 1900s. It can now be found blocking almost every Cape Town waterway, deoxygenating the water and devastating local fauna and flora.
I am interested in the somewhat grotesque bulging, pulling, squishing, knotting, and rubbery nature of the hyacinth. In its dried, woven, and sculptural state, it retains its presence as a matting alien organism that spreads and constricts. As the hyacinth in the river grows endlessly, so the hanging and twisting dried hyacinth sculptures expand and hold the space in an installation reminiscent of a hyacinth forest.
My dad and I built a loom in the first two weeks of lockdown in 2020. Continuing to be in lockdown on and off for over a year now has resulted in a rhythm of loom work. Operating a loom that is bigger than me feels like expanding my body further into space, taking up all the space that I have in my studio rather than being contained and isolated.
I have focused on harvesting hyacinths in the Black River and Princess Vlei, being outdoors growing flax on my pavement, and bringing these materials from the outside world into my studio. In some sense, my loom and my body thus lengthen out to these locations. Rather than feeling stuck in my home or studio, I feel like I have spent this time connecting several sites around Cape Town through my focus on materials. This “extending” and “collecting” has grounded me, brought me sanity, and given me purpose over the last year.”