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Look at Me
 
Nontsikelelo (Lolo) Veleko: Nonkululeko, 2003
© The artist
Courtesy the artist, The Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm/New York,
and Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
 
 

Shifting Dialogues

 
Photography from The Walther Collection
 

Martina Bacigalupo » Sammy Baloji » Oladélé Ajiboyé Bamgboyé » Yto Barrada » Bernd & Hilla Becher » Jodi Bieber » Edson Chagas » Mimi Cherono Ng’ok » Kudzanai Chiurai » Alfred Martin Duggan-Cronin » Theo Eshetu » Em'Kal Eyongakpa » Rotimi Fani-Kayode » Samuel Fosso » François-Xavier Gbré » David Goldblatt » Kay Hassan » Délio Jasse » Seydou Keïta » Lebohang Kganye » Sabelo Mlangeni » Santu Mofokeng » Singarum Jeevaruthnam Moodley (Kitty) » Zanele Muholi » Mwangi Hutter » Grace Ndiritu » Mame-Diarra Niang » J. D. 'Okhai Ojeikere » Dawit L. Petros » Jo Ractliffe » August Sander » Berni Searle » Malick Sidibé » Penny Siopis » Mikhael Subotzky » Guy Tillim » Hentie van der Merwe » Nontsikelelo "Lolo" Veleko » Sue Williamson »

 
April 9 – September 25, 2022
 
 

K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen

Ständehausstr. 1, 40217 Düsseldorf
T +49 (0)211-8381600

www.kunstsammlung.de
Tue-Fri 10am-6pm; Sat, Sun 11am-6pm
K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen
 
 
Look at Me
 
Guy Tillim: Grande Hotel, Beira, Mosambik, 2008
© The artist
Courtesy the artist and Stevenson, Kapstadt und Johannesburg
 
 
How are cultural and historical processes of transformation reflected in the medium of photography? With more than 500 photographic works from Africa, its diaspora, and Europe, the exhibition "Shifting Dialogues. Photography from The Walther Collection" traces the development of photography as a history of transnational parallels and contradictions: showcasing the beginnings of ethnographic images during the colonial era, self-determined studio photography — and politics of self-fashioning — from the 1940s onwards, and the potent visual activism practiced by a constituency of contemporary artists in the present. The photographic and lens-based media artworks assembled here systematically reveal the ambivalent — and shifting — relationship between image and self-image, portraiture and social identity, representation and performance.

An important point of reference is the 2010 group exhibition "Events of the Self: Portraiture and Social Identity," curated by Okwui Enwezor (1963–2019) for The Walther Collection. Enwezor, one of the most influential curators of recent decades, utilized the example of portrait photography to illustrate how photographic image production did not always develop in geographically or historically uniform, homogenous ways, characterized by multiple ruptures, contrasts as well as intimate dialogues. With his presentation, he emphasized "the conceptual and comparative relationship between different traditions of image-making" as well as the unfolding "changes in African identities and subjectivities from colonial to postcolonial modernity."

A decade later, the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen pays tribute to Okwui Enwezor’s pioneering curatorial vision and the extraordinary commitment of the collector Artur Walther. Thanks to their profound contributions toward expanding the cultural history of photography, we are now able to present groundbreaking projects which have hardly been considered within this museum’s discourse until now.
 
 
Look at Me
 
Seydou Keïta: Untitled, 1952–1955
Courtesy The Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm/New York City and
CAAC - The Pigozzi Collection, Geneva
 
 
As in "Events of the Self," and in the exhibition "Distance and Desire" (2013) curated by Tamar Garb, the pathway through "Shifting Dialogues. Photography from The Walther Collection" at K21 is marked by several dialogical juxtapositions — Seydou Keïta and August Sander; Malick Sidibé, J.D. 'Okhai Ojeikere and Bernd & Hilla Becher, Santu Mofokeng and Alfred Martin Duggan-Cronin — that offer focused time capsules for contemplation. They sketch out the complex interrelationships between unfolding societal transformations, social change, politics of identity, and artistic production. Here, the myriad possibilities of documentary portraiture, the importance of typological, taxonomic, and serial structures for the medium of photography as well as the power – and ambivalent nature – of the photographic gaze are made evident.

The historical dialogues are accompanied by queer performative portraits by the late Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–1989) as well as conceptual bodies of works by contemporary artists such as Yto Barrada, Samuel Fosso, Sabelo Mlangeni, Zanele Muholi, MwangiHutter, Grace Ndiritu, and Berni Searle. Characterized by visual activism, social critique and subversive politics, the works – produced largely in the early 2000s – question prevalent concepts of the (black) body and break with conventional gender binaries, while challenging cultural appropriation and structural racism.

 
 
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Mwangi Hutter: Static Drift, 2009
© The artist
Courtesy the artist und The Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm/New York City
 
 
The photographic works of Theo Eshetu, David Goldblatt, Santu Mofokeng, Jo Ractliffe, Mikhael Subotzky, and Guy Tillim focus on the human habitat: the built environment, the dense structures of inner cities, or the vast, empty landscape with its imprint of historical trauma. Their works are inscribed with traces of (post)colonial and (post)industrial conflicts as well as testimonies to collective memory and spirituality.

The voices of a younger generation of artists are represented in more recently acquired works by Edson Chagas, Em'kal Eyongakpa, François-Xavier Gbré, Délio Jasse, Lebohang Kganye, Mimi Cherono Ng'ok, Mame-Diarra Niang, and Dawit L. Petros. Their practice reflects a contemporary paradigm shift in post- and decolonial discourses, offering insights into the present possibilities and complex thematics of contemporary photography from an Afrodiasporic perspective that is at once plurivocal, subjective, and critically engaged.

The exhibition is conceived in close collaboration with The Walther Collection, supported by curatorial consultant Renee Mussai.

Advised by Contemporary And (C&).
 
 
Look at Me
 
Santu Mofokeng: Eyes-wide-shut, Motouleng Cave, Clarens, 2004
© The artist
Courtesy the artist and MAKER/Lunetta Bartz, Johannesburg
 
 
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