Loading...

Lost & Found

Lost & Found

Stevenson is pleased to present Lost and Found, a solo exhibition by Serge Alain Nitegeka. Using sculpture and painting, the artist continues to give form to intimate experiences of forced migration.

In Lost and Found, Nitegeka offers tactile and conjectural works of ambiguous material and weight that articulate narratives of displacement, in particular his own experiences and those of refugees and asylum seekers in central Africa.

The artist writes:

'The objects they made came in all sorts of shapes and manageable sizes. No one knew what the other had cocooned inside. All they had in common was their function: to carry their belongings. The objects were nondescript; the contours revealed nothing save for abstract shapes and whatever else could be imagined. The objects were made from familiar objects: old suitcases, buckets and basins. From daily use, wear and repair, the objects turned out complex and beautiful. The once familiar objects morphed into hybrid unfamiliar objects. Suitcases were enlarged and wrapped in beddings, tent tarps and PVC sheeting. Two plastic basins were melt-glued together into makeshift luggage, whatever the moment called for. Crude fabricated objects that were delightfully minimalistic emerged – objects in flux fashioned by time and circumstances.'

Their objects were vessels of memories of their former selves and monuments to whom they had become. When they were forced to leave their homes and cross borders, they lost their identity. Across the borders, they began to identify themselves with the objects they made and carried. Their objects belonged to everyone and to no one, lost and found in time and place.

*This is Nitegeka’s seventh solo exhibition with the gallery.

Your Review

RATING

927 VIEWS
0 Likes

Share To

Culture Reporter

Culture Reporter

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The Basha Uhuru Creative Uprising

The Basha Uhuru Creative Uprising

From the 16 - 21 November The Basha Uhuru Creative Uprising will take place at Constitution Hill. The festival will bring creatives together in an event aimed to develop and elevate creative talent within a variety of art forms including music, film, art, design, dance, theatre and poetry.

Ntsako Wa Xibelani

Ntsako Wa Xibelani

Such incidents were not rare; the negative social stereotyping of traditional culture amongst black people goes back to the establishment of the missionaries, a religious, pseudo-colonial undertaking that deemed African culture uncivilized, and demanded Africans do away with their traditional, “sinful”, ways of life in exchange for “virtuous” Western culture and its “superior” education.

Pilani Bubu’s Folklore - Chapter 1

Pilani Bubu’s Folklore - Chapter 1

Generations of African history is undocumented or destroyed, the preservation of our culture and beliefs is an important asset, as we define and redefine our own identity. Through the technology of music and art, we find ways to capture what is left of our folklore and re-imagine the Africa we want to be.

comments
Go to TOP