Sethembile Msezane: Living sculptures that stand for history's truths
Sethembile Msezane deconstructs the act of public commemoration -- how it creates myths, constructs histories, includes some and excludes others. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to imagine this with me.
very little context,
a figment of your own imagination.
that reflect upon our society,
how a young black girl can grow up
and perhaps she doesn't exist.
positive images of themselves
are negative stereotypes,
that the rest of society treats them.
for about five years at the time.
of dislocation and invisibility.
South Africa what it is today.
ever as neutral as they may seem.
this performance in 2013 on Heritage Day.
with masculine architecture,
and Afrikaner nationalist men
gender and racial divide,
the way that women --
to dominant male figures
and the act of remembering
and effective ways.
public holiday series,
as a form of social commentary
to certain issues,
of the black female body
to the union buildings in 1956,
of how women are treated,
against apartheid laws.
being seen as only victims in society.
how people reacted to this.
my performances,
reflect upon their society,
as well as the current democracy.
She's been there since three o'clock.
About an hour still?
are quick to join a group
to do something as an individual.
versus the collective.
individual message in performance ...
that she's doing it on her own.
she's using hair extensions as wings,
there right now,
African pride, I think.
represents the African culture.
all these colonial statues.
Bhambatha, Moshoeshoe, Kwame Nkrumah --
for our liberation.
Maybe in a museum; not here.
places where young people,
Rhodes, all these people,
the colonialism.
was scheduled to be removed
for and against its removal
in statues in South Africa.
focused on problematizing
I had just begun my master's
of the debate of the statue,
a meeting with my supervisors,
was going to fall on that day.
as the statue came down.
that was looted from Great Zimbabwe
in Cecil John Rhodes's estate
for nearly four hours.
on their phones and cameras.
of Cecil John Rhodes.
as he became absent from his base,
has arisen in South Africa.
in the same space and time
beliefs and dreams
felt incomplete.
of God and the ancestors,
a little bit more,
share a common story
that were looted from Great Zimbabwe.
were returned to the monument.
that there will be unrest
about the world around me:
and not only see an image of myself,
who have made me who I am today.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sethembile Msezane - ArtistSethembile Msezane deconstructs the act of public commemoration -- how it creates myths, constructs histories, includes some and excludes others.
Why you should listen
With masked face and powerful gestures, Sethembile Msezane disrupts and deconstructs the process of commemorative practice in South Africa, demanding space next to colonial-era statues for her country's, and her gender's, erased histories. In one iconic work, she performed at the removal of the John Cecil Rhodes statue at the University of Cape Town ("Chapungu: The Day Rhodes Fell," 2015), and starting in 2013 she performed a series of pieces called "Public Holiday" that place her body in contrast to colonial-era monuments in Cape Town's CBD.
Msezane is a ANTI Festival International Prize for Live Art nominee (2017). She is the TAF & Sylt Emerging Artist Residency Award winner (2016), and she is the first recipient of the Rising Light award at the Mbokodo Awards. She is also a a Barclays L’Atelier Top 10 Finalist (2016). Her 2017 solo show at Gallery MOMO is titled "Kwasuka Sukel: Re-imagined Bodies of a (South African) '90s Born Woman", and features sculptural work that places colonial images in the context of Victorian-style furniture and dress, reframing and reclaiming a part of colonial history. She was one of the selected artists for gallery solo projects at the FNB Joburg Art Fair (2017), and her work is currently housed in the Zeitz MOCAA collection as well as Iziko South African National Gallery's collection.
Selected group shows include "Women's Work and The Art of Disruptions" at the Iziko South African National Gallery (2016), "Dis(colour)ed Margins" at the National Gallery of Zimbabwe (2017), "Re[as]sisting Narratives" at Framer Framed, Amsterdam (2016), "Dance, if you want to enter my country!/ Global Citizen" at GoetheOnMain, Johannesburg (2016), "Nothing Personal" at SMAC Gallery, Cape Town, #theopening at Greatmore Studios, Cape Town (2016) and "Translations" at Emergent Art Space and Reed College, Portland, Oregon (2015).
Sethembile Msezane | Speaker | TED.com