Kudzi Mome

KUDZANAI CHIURAI’S STATE OF THE NATION

In award-winning artist Kudzanai Chiurai’s State of the Nation exhibition, the notion of state is explored as a utopia and an action, a state of mind as well as a status. His new exhibition features photographic prints, drawings, large oil paintings, video, sound installation and performance with a focus on youth culture. State of the Nation proposes fresh ways of looking at the socio-politics of Africa today. It explores the African condition by juxtaposing the past and the present of a continent in the grip of violent civil wars.

Born in 1981 in Zimbabwe, Kudzanai Chiurai is an internationally acclaimed young artist now living and working in Johannesburg South Africa. He was the first black student to graduate with a BA Fine Art from the University of Pretoria. Regarded as part of the born free generation in Zimbabwe, born one year after the country’s independence from Rhodesia, Chiurai’s early work focused on the political, economic and social strife in his homeland. Seminal works like Presidential Wallpaper depicted Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe as a sell-out and led to Chiurai’s exile from Zimbabwe.

The title, State of the Nation, is intended to explore aspects of a constructed African state that has just been ravaged by conflict. On a continent that has experienced more violent conflict than any other, this exhibition follows an individual’s narration of events that lead up to the inaugural speech by the first supposedly democratically elected prime minister. This leader styled along many of our existing African leaders, retells the history of a people from another time, but still Africa’s time says the artist.

With Melissa Mboweni as a curator and collaborations with photographer Jurie Potgieter and singers Thandiswa Mazwai and Zaki Ibrahim, Chiurai references child soldiers, African liberation movements, and civil wars. He tracks the similarities in the societal, political and ideological fabric of states in tumultuous times of transition.

Notions of public and private are raised in performances taking place in the streets of Newtown and in basements with limited access. A sound installation scores the gallery experience. Representations of spectacle perpetuated by the media are brought to question. Scenes captured in photographs, drawings and paintings play into popular hip-hop imagery…

In a similar style to previous bodies of work (Dying to be Men series of 2009), Chiurai’s constructed environments are enticing and seductive but explore very real casualties of African independence and democracy and the effects of globalisation on war. Chiurai’s nation asks, if we could write our history and chart our futures as we please, who would we be?

The Show opens in November 3 at 18:30 – 50 Gwi Gwi Mrwebi St Newtown, Johannesburg and closes on the 3 December 2011
November 6 – Opening at 12:00 – Goodman Gallery Projects, Arts on Main, 264 Fox St, City & Suburban, Johannesburg, Closing in January 2012.

What Others Are Saying

  1. Lulama Duma Oct 31, 2011 at 2:30 pm

    Hi,

    LIke Chiurai’s work. Is the opening “open” to the public? We’d like to attend.

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