‘When We See Us’: Black figurative painting at Cape Town’s Zeitz MOCAA
A group show of Black figurative painting at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, featuring 156 artists, explores the past and present of self-representation
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- Sign up to our newsletter Newsletter
When the charismatic Swiss-Cameroonian curator Koyo Kouoh took over the helm of Cape Town’s Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa ( Zeitz MOCAA) in May 2019, she made it her primary mission to focus on individual artists. ‘So many ideas and positions [about Africa] have been lumped into group shows, and not enough work has been done on individual voices,’ said Kouoh at the time – and promptly directed her energies to overseeing well-received museum solos for Otobong Nkanga, Johannes Phokela and Tracey Rose. ‘That doesn’t mean we won’t do group shows,’ she pre-emptively added.
Honouring that promise and aiming for the moon, Zeitz MOCAA’s latest exhibition under Kouoh’s stewardship is a maximalist affair with a pulsing pop heart. ‘When We See Us: A Century of Black Figuration in Painting’ features more than 200 paintings by 156 artists from Africa and its global diaspora. Jointly curated by Kouoh and assistant curator Tandazani Dhlakama, the line-up includes a who’s who of important earlier 20th-century painters, among them Wifredo Lam and Horace Pippin. The exhibition also leans heavily into the present, showing recent works by rising stars like Roméo Mivekannin and Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi alongside arresting pieces by market darlings Amoako Boafo and Amy Sherald. Gucci is the presenting sponsor.
Some curmudgeonly early viewers have taken issue with the exhibition’s easy embrace of the market. Speaking in March, nine months ahead of the gala event inaugurating ‘When We See Us’, Kouoh explained that the project was very much inspired by the ‘renewed prominence of Black figuration’ at market and in museums. ‘We welcome this development for many reasons, not least because, despite cyclical announcements of the death of painting, painting nevertheless remains a central and indestructible medium of expression used by so many artists in our curatorial purview – Africa and its vast diaspora.’
Medium aside, pronouns matter to a fuller appreciation of ‘When We See Us’. The exhibition’s title is a play on director Ava DuVernay’s 2019 Netflix miniseries When They See Us, a crime drama exploring racial antagonisms in America. ‘We wanted to flip things around and change perspective,’ explained Kouoh. By substituting ‘they’ with ‘we’, the exhibition places Black self-representation front and centre. ‘In all my work and endeavours, my drive is to create a language and a space for us to speak to ourselves, particularly because our humanity, our practices, our achievements, our histories have been so defined by others, by proxy.’
Shunning chronology or regionalism in favour of a thematic display, ‘When We See Us’ unfolds across six sections devoted to, in sequence, the everyday, joy and revelry, repose, sensuality, spirituality, and triumph and emancipation. The exhibition design – courtesy of Cape Town practice Wolff Architects – encompasses trim seating reminiscent of Richard Neutra, raw pine elements, curtains, and freestanding walls that enable overlapping viewing. Musician Neo Muyanga has additionally curated room-appropriate playlists, using music by Miriam Makeba, Ebo Taylor, Youssou N’Dour, NWA and others to add verve (or distraction) to the human encounter demanded by this exhibition.
A brief wall text introduces each section. The content is partisan and told from the perspective of an enthused participant, not a dispassionate observer. ‘There is beauty in our daily lives,’ reads a text adjacent to the exhibition’s opening two works. South African George Pemba’s oil painting The Gardener (1991), depicting a man tending a suburban garden, is paired with an untitled gouache from 1940 by American Romare Bearden that shows a woman with calloused knuckles bearing a harvest of tobacco leaves. The combination is revealing, beyond the focus on labour and the sublimated histories they gesture to. Among the 28 nationalities represented, Americans dominate, with 35 artists, followed by South Africa, with 16 artists. Artists from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya and Nigeria are the next most represented nationalities.
But ‘When We See Us’ is not an exhibition about nationalities, which were already complicated by 1947 when South African Gerard Sekoto settled in Paris, five years ahead of American Beauford Delaney. Both artists died in penury in exile. Both have humdingers on show: Sekoto’s Evening on the Corner (1943) shows a gathering of five figures observed in low light, while Delaney’s untitled 1970 portrait of a man in striped two-piece pulses with light and colour. It hangs close to Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s 11pm Friday (2010), a remarkable study of poise and presence, and the show’s midpoint. The Delaney is a fitting place to pause and draw one’s breath in preparedness for the thrilling surprises still to come.
‘When We See Us’, supported by Gucci, runs until 3 September 2023 at Zeitz MOCAA, zeitzmocaa.museum (opens in new tab)
-
Cara \ Davide is the Milanese design duo inventing a new design language on the cusp of contemporary and ancestral
In our Future Icons series, we explore ten next-generation designers who have made us sit up and take notice: here, we speak to Cara \ Davide about their design process and their cross-cultural inspirations
By Maria Cristina Didero • Published
-
34th São Paulo Bienal arrives at Luma Arles for first European presentation
An exhibition of highlights from the 34th São Paulo Bienal is at Luma Arles, marking its European and tour finale
By Martha Elliott • Published
-
This winter’s most stylish skiwear, Gucci to Hermès
Statement-making skiwear for on and off the slopes, from Louis Vuitton, Dior, Moncler and more
By Jack Moss • Published