Curators Corner

‘Marvellous Realism’ Exhibition is Open at Fotografiska, Shanghai

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‘Marvellous Realism’ is a groundbreaking contemporary African exhibition inspiring new perspectives and understanding on the Continent from Chinese audiences. Zanele Muholi’s works from the Somnyama Ngonyama (Hail the Dark Lioness) series are part of ‘Marvellous Realism’. The extensive group exhibition started on the 30th of August and will run until the 30th of November 2024 at Fotografiska, Shanghai.

This is the first and largest exhibition of African film and photography in Asia and is curated by British Ghanaian writer, curator and broadcaster Ekow Eshun, project-led by co-founder of RMB Latitudes, an art fair in South Africa, and Latitudes Online Lucy MacGarry, and proudly presented by Fotografiska in partnership with Lady Linda Wong-Davies and the KT Wong Foundation. ‘Marvellous Realism’ is founded on an awarenessof how the rich and diverse contemporary art and cultural scenes in Africa remain largely unknown to the Chinese public, in spite of the importance of long-standing economic and political relationships.

Image courtesy of Southern Guild

Focusing primarily on sub-Saharan African countries, the group exhibition is transnational in outlook and presents work by both established and emerging artists. It employs the media of photography and film as a means to envisage contemporary African cultural identity as a state of ongoing possibility, in which myth, memory and movement weave together into a rich tapestry of expansively imaginative art works. As such, the exhibition is subdivided into three sections: ‘Myth’, ‘Memory’ and ‘Movement’. ‘Myth’ brings together work by six artists who explore mythology, myth-making, folklore, spirituality, tradition and science fiction as central tenants of their work. ‘Movement’, the section of which Muholi is a part, alongside four other photographers, boldly articulates new optics on movement, migration and the visualising of Black bodies in space and time.

The works provide a wide array of viewpoints on the challenges and opportunities that diasporic movement around the globe brings, both for individuals and the communities they become part of. Lastly, ‘Memory’ looks at the ways contemporary artists from Africa draw on collective memory to play with, challenge and transform notions of identity.

Image courtesy of Southern Guild

All the featured artists in the exhibition invoke Africa as an innately cosmopolitan condition that is closer in kind to the philosopher Achille Mbembe’s description of the continent as ‘a body in motion born out of overlapping genealogies, at the intersections of multiple encounters with multiple elsewhere.’ The 16 featured artists include: Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou (Benin), Atong Atem (South Sudan), Justin Dingwall (South Africa), Maïmouna Guerresi (Senegal, Italy), Hassan Hajjaj (Morocco), Ayana V. Jackson (South Africa, USA), Cyrus Kabiru (Kenya), Lebohang Kganye (South Africa), Michael MacGarry (South Africa), Mohau Modisakeng (South Africa), Zanele Muholi (South Africa), Ruby Okoro (Nigeria), David Ozochukwu (Nigeria, Austria), Thania Peterson (South Africa), Micha Serraf (Zimbabwe) and Mary Sibande (South Africa).

Image courtesy of Southern Guild
Author

Lelethu Sobekwa is a published author, freelance copywriter and editor born in Gqeberha, South Africa. She holds a BA Honours in English and an MA in Creative Writing with distinction from Rhodes University. Lelethu currently writes for Art Network Africa.

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