Present Tense: Photos from the South of Africa

Present Tense: Photos from the South of Africa

Fondation Calouste Gulbenkian – Délégation en France

Paul Samuels, XVI X, 2012. Digital photograph printed on cotton paper, 94 cm x 62 cm. © Paul Samuels.

June 20, 2013

Present Tense: Photos from the South of Africa
22 June–1 September 2013, Lisbon
18 September–14 December 2013, Paris

Opening: June 21, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon
September 17, Fondation Calouste Gulbenkian – Délégation en France, Paris

Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
Av. Berna, 45 A
1067-001 Lisbon
Portugal

Fondation Calouste Gulbenkian Délégation en France
39 Bd de la Tour-Maubourg
75007 Paris

www.gulbenkian.pt

A coproduction of Gulbenkian Next Future Program and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Paris.

Present Tense exhibition will be taking place nineteen years after the end of the apartheid regime in South Africa, twenty-one years after the peace agreements in Mozambique, twenty-three years after Namibia declared independence and eleven years after the death of Jonas Savimbi, which marked the end of the civil war in Angola.

In just two decades, the ever-changing political and social situation of this region of Africa has brought all kinds of challenges for its citizens, including the one of learning how to live together: in each town, and in each country with their neighbors across the border. It has not been an easy or evident path to follow, and occasionally a step backwards has threatened to destroy the expectations created twenty years earlier. There are different levels to the processes of democratization in these countries, but they all share the fact that they have been slow in responding to social expectations. 

An essential premise in the curatorship of the Present Tense exhibition is that Africa, in its enormous and complex diversity, is a set of nations born of ancient migrations and recent migrations, whose absurd borders were drawn at the Berlin Conference, and in which even the countries from the south have no regional identity, with their different political regimes, their asymmetrical rates of development, their diverse migrations and the multiple configurations of their towns and cities.

The exhibition focuses on the work of three recent generations of photographers, who began their work in the post-apartheid period. As a feature that is recurrently found in the works by these authors, these photographs—many of which were expressly produced for this exhibition—are frequently full of people. Photographing people, their lives, their disappointments, the suffering to which they were subjected for many years, and the exclusions to which they fell victim, obliged the photographers to create new directions for the professionals of these countries.

Today we are fairly far removed from the photographs made of black people who were officially, and frequently, described in the same visual language as fauna and flora. In this exhibition we are interested in showing and comparing the work of photographers who live in or have passed through a set of cities that are mainly situated in what is, generally speaking, referred to by Southern Africa. Regardless of the genres—portrait, landscape, document, or photojournalism—these are photographs about the “present tense,” highlighting the contemporary tensions that prevail in this region. The sometimes unusual thematic choices and the mise en scène have been carefully thought through, with issues of identity and public space at the centre of these works.

But this present tension, sometimes threatening us with the prospect of our being close to yet another historic catastrophe, is not specific to Southern Africa, since it is a globalised affair; because of this, it is important to state the urgency of the contract between photography and the present, in all of its combinations of life.

Present Tense – Photos from the South of Africa
Works by Délio Jasse (Angola), Dillon Marsh (South Africa), Filipe Branquinho (Mozambique), Guy Tillim (South Africa), Jo Ractliffe (South Africa), Kiluanji Kia Henda (Angola), Mack Magagane (South Africa), Malala Andrialavidrazana (Madagascar), Mauro Pinto (Mozambique), Paul Samuels (South Africa), Pieter Hugo (South Africa), Sabelo Mlangeni (South Africa), Sammy Baloji (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi (Zimbabwe).

Curator: António Pinto Ribeiro (Portugal)

Present Tense exhibition is part of the Gulbenkian Next Future summer festival, hosting a series of events that include the 9th edition of the Bamako Photography Encounters Pan-African Exhibition, site-specific installations, live performances, open-air film screenings, and literary meetings, mainly at the magnificent Gulbenkian Park in the center of Lisbon. In the next few weeks leading contemporary thinkers and artists from the South of Africa will be at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation to talk about their ideas and their work.

Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation 
Created in 1956, the Foundation works in the fields of arts, charity, education and science. Its headquarters are in Lisbon, with delegations running in Paris and in London. www.gulbenkian.pt

Próximo Futuro/Next Future is a Gulbenkian Program dedicated in particular, but not exclusively, to contemporary culture in Europe, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean. www.proximofuturo.gulbenkian.pt

For further press information, please contact Sara Pais at spais [​at​] gulbenkian.pt or +351 21782 3266.


 

Present Tense: Photos from the South of Africa presented by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
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Fondation Calouste Gulbenkian – Délégation en France
June 20, 2013

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