


‘Untitled’, 2010. Charcoal on plywood.
the above piece was reviewed by the blog Kitsune Noir. it has been touched upon by two other blogs since, BildBunt and Pattern Pulp.
thanks to all for the kind reviews!



‘Untitled’, 2010. Charcoal on plywood.
the above piece was reviewed by the blog Kitsune Noir. it has been touched upon by two other blogs since, BildBunt and Pattern Pulp.
thanks to all for the kind reviews!
image from South African Art Times
“Contemporary African Art Since 1980“, by Okwui Enwezor and Chika Okeke-Agulu. perfect timing, i want this book.
check out the link and some sample images from the book. the David Goldblatt picture is so powerful…
Copenhagen’s Biggest Art Exhibit Gets It Wrong
by Ed Morris
[...] I loved every piece in the ReThink show in some way. But as an enterprise, as a totality, it fails to live up to the moment. This was an exhibit explicitly designed to contribute to the discourse around the Climate Conference and to “offer its interpretation of the colossal challenge the globe is facing.”
I did not find this aspiration fulfilled in the complacency of the exhibit’s overall organization for any number of reasons: Its predominantly gentle tone. Its predilection for name-brand artists. Its inclusion of so many gee-whiz projects (twirling lights, hanging raindrops, and so forth.). The general lack of participatory projects (People Speak and Superflex provided two notable exceptions). The cliché of investing art with the “power” of “questioning,” yet steering that questioning energy—which is not to say criticality—to such corny artspeak topics as “the implicit,” “relations,” and “kakotopia.”
-from GOOD.is
–
i often like to think that art and social change go hand in hand, that art can be a useful vehicle for not just raising awareness, but for proposing innovative alternatives to existing structures. mini-utopias, or perhaps less ideologically, social experiments.
at the same time, being immersed in an environment in which artistic practice is highly regarded, i have to constantly remind myself to not get sucked too deep into thinking that art has real power to enact social change – there are many obvious limitations. the above extract is from an article that gives a review of the art exhibitions currently on show in time with COP15 (you can read Part I here, where the author makes a list of artistic ‘possible errors’). while i understand very much the need for urgency and physicality, i certainly don’t agree with the ‘violence’ as suggested at the beginning of the article, unless if interpreted metaphorically. why is it that we need this to happen before people really take notice?
Comfort (2009) was the piece I had in the New Breed show. The idea came to me on the first anniversary of my mother’s passing. The piece marks a turning point for me as it is deeply personal – all my other artwork deals mainly with social, cultural or political issues. It is also my first performance piece, something I had never done in the past. I ended up spending an hour everyday at the gallery during the course of the exhibition to give massages.
Here is what the wall text says:

“My mother passed away on September 18, 2008, after a year and a half of fighting cancer. During her time of sickness, I would regularly give her hand and foot massages. The act of touching gave us comfort at a time when nothing was left to be said.”
The artist will be giving massages to willing participants. You may choose to receive either a hand or foot massage, or both. If you would like a foot massage, please remove your shoes, wipe your feet with wet wipes and put on the slippers provided. The artist will motion you to enter when she is ready. She will remain silent during the massage, and will tap your shoulder when she is finished.
You are welcome to leave comments in the notebook provided.

The waiting area – there is a comment book for participants to leave comments

the massage area – there was a curtain that blocked it off from the waiting area

a clock to keep time, tissues, latex gloves (in case the participants had nasty cuts), hand sanitizer, moisturizer (better than oils as it doesn’t leave stains on clothes)

in action

leaving comments
—
In preparation for Comfort, I spoke to several massage therapists. I thought it would be nice to add a ‘professional touch’ to my massage routine, and so I considered getting a crash course in massage therapy. However, after I worked on massage therapist Rebecca Burke’s hands and feet, thinking that she would give me pointers as to what needed to be improved with my ‘protocol’, she said the most compelling thing of all: “what was good enough for your mother is good enough for everyone else.” And that was the end of my training. During the course of my performance, I realised that the most important thing was to truly care and to communicate that in touch – and people will feel comforted simply from that.
Speaking to guest artists and critics about the idea also made me realise that after I share my story with someone, more often than not they are compelled to share a story in response. I didn’t really realise this until one of the critics, Cara Ober, pointed out just how important it is to allow the participants to speak back, and to document such response. Such response has become an intergral part to my project – I noticed that once I opened up and shared my story, others would want to share their own stories of loss, life and death as well; Comfort became a platform for talking, mourning and celebrating what is usually left unspoken, and what is universally experienced.
I want to thank Maren Hassinger for her continual encouragement – I don’t think I would have had the courage to put this together without her support. The piece started off in dedication to my mother – in many ways it still is. At the same time it has also grown to be something bigger – it’s now about Maren’s mother, it was her mother’s massage table that I used, as well as Alonzo Davis‘ father, and the baby in the pregnant woman’s belly, and the MICA undergrad who’s father is fighting cancer at this very moment, and the Rinehart student who’s just had a rough day at the studio and needs a hand massage.
You can read the comments people left here.