Gerald Machona (born 1986) [1] is a Zimbabwean contemporary visual artist. The most recognizable aspect of his work is his use of decommissioned Zimbabwean dollars. [2] Machona works in sculpture, performance, new media, photography and film. [3] In Machona's work, he explores issues of migration, transnationality, social interaction and xenophobia in South Africa. [3]
Machona was born in Kwekwe, Zimbabwe, in 1986. [4] In 2006, few places in Zimbabwe offered higher education in art, so Machona left Zimbabwe to pursue a bachelor's degree in art at Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town. [4] He went on to get his master's degree in fine arts at Rhodes University in Makhanda. [3] [4] [2] Machona is now pursuing his PhD at the University of Cape Town. He currently lives in Cape Town with his wife and fellow artist, Sethembile Msezane. [4]
In 2006, When Machona moved to Cape Town, South Africa, he faced difficulties due to the fact that he didn't have family or friends to provide him support. [4] The lack of financial support created a feeling of displacement, which became reflective in one of his famous work, I am an Afronaut. [4] [5] Machona became a witness and a victim of the conflicts between the black majority and the politically dominant white minority in South Africa. [5] The use of decommissioned Zimbabwean currency is commonly seen in his art work to reflect on the sense of disempowerment and disconnectedness he experienced when Machona arrived in South Africa. [3] Due to hyperinflation and economic instability in Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean dollars are measured in pennies compared to the US dollar. [5] He uses these decommission dollars to provide commentary on the currency that was supposed to provide security, had begun to lose value and eventually became obsolete. [4]
Greener Pastures is an exhibition of Machona held at the Goodman Gallery in Cape Town in 2018. [6] The exhibition was about yearning for a better life or situation, featuring themes that hint to an Afro-Utopia. In the show, the photographic piece Your Silence Will Not Protect You (2018) was featured. In the photograph, there is a figure cloaked in Holstein skin, fully surrounded by flowers made of decommissioned dollars. The gesture in the photograph is reminiscent to the Lobola process where the women in the bride's family, gleefully hit the groom. Machona musters a feminist portrayal to expose how matriarchal voices are rising and changing patriarchal African cultural identities. [7]
BRICS (2018) was one of the Machona's floral sculptures exhibited at the Greener Pastures exhibition. [6] The piece is made of glass, copper and decommissioned currency. [8] In the same exhibition, the floral sculpture 7 Colonial Powers (2018) gathers the national flowers of European states that split the African continent into colonial plunder in the winter of 1884/85, while BRICS represents twenty-first-century economies that function as neocolonial powers and, in the case of China, have a sizable domestic population of African-born workers. [1] [9]
Machona has several works that center around the themes of Afrofuturism. [9] When Machona moved to Cape Town in 2006, he faced xenophobia and Afrophobia first hand. His work after living there has reflected the struggle towards what he calls Afro-Utopia. [5] [9] Machona engages in his sculptural space suit, Ndiri Afronaut (I am an Afronaut), that has the commonality of Zimbabwean bank notes featured in several of his works. [9] In 2012, Machona had other collaborators wore the suit for a series of performances for film projects featured in Vabvakure (People from Far Away). [10] Over time, the Afronaut became a form of protection against real or symbolic dangers in South Africa. At the end of the performances, it concludes on a light note with Machona and the other Afronauts shedding their protective gear, revealing they are not European but African explorers. [5] [9] [1]
Gerald Machona was featured in a group exhibition called, Disguise: Masks and Global African Art located in major Institution, the Brooklyn Museum. [1] This show included other famous contemporary artist such as Nick Cave, Edson Chagas, Emeka Ogboh, Nandipha Mntambo and many others. [11] [1]
Machona's work was included in a major biennial show called What remains is tomorrow; the installation at the South African Pavilion at 56th Venice Biennale, 2015. [1] Alongside Machona, the exhibition included contemporary artists such as Willem Boshoff, Angus Gibson, Jo Ractliffe, Robin Rhode and several others. [12] [1]
Gerald Machona has won several awards in his solo and group artist career. Machona's work has been featured in numerous public collections, including Johannesburg Art Gallery, Goodman Gallery , Stevenson Gallery, Iziko South African National Gallery and Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art. [1] [2]
Brett Murray is a South African artist mostly known for his steel and mixed media wall sculptures. He was born in Pretoria, South Africa. Murray has a master's degree in fine art from the Michaelis School of Fine Art, 1989. Referred to by critic Brenda Atkinson as "the dark prince of South African pop (art)", Murray is one of the country's most popular artists, often using easily recognisable media images with the addition of a subversive and bitterly funny twist. Murray's work addresses the wars of the cultures, the clash between Afrocentrism and Eurocentrism, the old and the new South Africas. "With my work I hope to critically entertain. Through satirical and tragic reflections on South Africa, I hope to shift people's perspectives and change people's minds, indulgent, arrogant and pretentious as this might sound," he says. More recently, his work has explored his own personal experiences and identity. Murray was also the founder of the sculpture department at Stellenbosch University.
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