Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography
Live Virtual Auction, 18 September 2024
Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography
About the SessionWays of Seeing: South African and International Photography showcases a collection of works that take a critical approach to photography, layered with themes of personhood, subjectivity and community.
The sale features works from distinct collections by passionate collectors with a discerning eye and deep engagement with art – featuring The Gary Eisenberg Collection, part of the Linda Givon Collection, works from The Photographic Archival and Preservation Association as well as a group of contemporary African artists who have made a significant mark within the medium of photography including, Zanele Muholi, Mary Sibande, Kudzanai Chiurai, Pieter Hugo and Nandipha Mntambo, among others.
With a title that pays homage to a great thinker, John Berger, Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography challenges traditional notions of the gaze, inviting us to engage the human experience through images of nude physical forms, intimate portraits, landscapes and depictions of the environment. The sale is a meditation on the ethics of seeing, often fraught with complexity and contestation.
It highlights the diversity within both local and global photographic traditions through an array of works, with significant contributions from African photographers alongside globally renowned artists such as Bill Brandt (British), Nan Goldin (American), Bettina Rheims (French), Sebastião Salgado (Brazilian), Viviane Sassen (Dutch), Wolfgang Tillmans (German), Joel-Peter Witkin (American), André Kertész (Hungarian), Roman Vishniac (Russian-American), and Youssef Nabil (Egyptian).
A significant portion of Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography is drawn from The Gary Eisenberg Collection following the tragic and untimely passing of Gary earlier this year. This inclusion comes with immense gratitude from Gary’s wife, Dominique Eisenberg.
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About this Item
inscribed with the title, numbered 9/10 and 'CMAC2466' on the reverse; accompanied by a Christopher Moller Gallery certificate of authenticity, signed by the artist, numbered and inscribed with the title and medium
Notes
The present lot is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity, the artist's biography and statement, courtesy of Christopher Moller Gallery.
Tony Gum is the recipient of the PULSE Prize for her 2017 solo exhibition, Ode to She, as part of PULSE contemporary art fair.
“Through this work, I want to re-iterate the power and representation of each woman, acknowledging all the women I have encountered throughout my journey, I needed it to be a ‘poem’, a ‘song’, ‘a letter to she’ … and I don’t mean ‘SHE’ in the gender confined or prescriptive sense. I speak of SHE, the Being, who understands HE/SHE to be a FORCE, like nature, a person who has been beaten, battered but is still able to rise.”¹—Tony Gum
1. Tony Gum quoted in Art Times, online, https://arttimes.co.za/newswire-pulse-miami-beach-winner-miami-beach-2017-pulse-prize-tony-gum/, accessed 11 August 2024.
In the words of the renowned African American author, poet, and social critic, James Baldwin, 'not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced'. Like Baldwin, Tony Gum believes that only when we examine such pervasive constructs like identity, race, gender, and so on, can we create opportunities for better understanding and growth. She fundamentally believes in the importance of approaching life from a position of knowledge, facing the 'truths' of who, what, and why we are, and this ultimately means that we are also free to evolve as beings. We become more liberated, whole, and balanced individuals in the world. It is precisely this perspective that has informed the freedom and growth we continue to experience in Gum's art. This series sees her returning 'home' to unearth what it means to be a Xhosa girl and woman. To do this, she immerses herself in core 'rites of passage', she sits with elders who welcome Gum with open arms, celebrating her genuine interest as a young daughter, granddaughter, sister, and female representative of Xhosa culture and people.
The piece entitled Intombi I depict Intonjane, the process of transitioning from a girl to a woman. Certain physiological practices like the exposure of the breasts among girls, Amatombazana a symbolic point of differentiation from abafazi or woman, umfazi who will generally wear Xhosa attire from the bosom down. Perhaps the more intimate and personal of her works to date, here Gum recognises, accepts, and celebrates the contrasting dimensions and narratives of life. In this work, Gum portrays the extent to which culture ultimately evolves. Integrating the range of human norms, practices, and experiences; culture is essentially a fluid and non-static evolutionary process; the idea is that we can take these contemporary and very commercial elements and fuse them with what is traditional so that it is relatable to all people.
Also, trying to see the everyday young girl, how would she be in this context of the 21st century, we are always on our phones, self indulged and also self-aware. This is also meant to be fun and playful. Whilst she is busy with her self-phone, she is still busy with her chores. But I like how although she is busy with her phone, she catches someone looking at her at the same time, that awkward moment when you are doing something on your phone and you catch someone looking at you....I displayed the Apple symbol openly, to make a statement about about gentrification and the impact of contemporary lifestyle, Apple being such a major corporate brand, based on personal experience, I realise how, like my cultural norms and traditions, the Apple brand also has its traditions, norms and practices, despite adapting different functionalities here and there'.
Text courtesy of Christopher Moller Gallery.