Installation view
Installation view
Installation view
Installation view
Installation view
Bester I, Mayotte, 2015. Gelatin silver print. Image: 27.25 x 20 inches. Paper: 31.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8.
Thembitshe, Parktown, 2014. Gelatin silver print. Image: 19.5 x 13. Paper: 23.5 x 17.25 inches. Edition of 8.
Bester IV, Mayotte, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. 31.35 x 22.5 inches. Edition of 8.
Thulani II, Parktown, 2015. Gelatin silver print. 19.5 x 14.5 inches. Edition of 8.
Hlengiwe, Paris, 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. 31.5 x 20.75 inches. Edition of 8.
Thembeka I, Upstate New York, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. Image:19.5 x 15.25 inches. Paper: 23.5 x 19.25 inches. Edition of 8.
Somnyama IV, Oslo, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. 39 x 32.5 inches. Edition of 8.
Zodwa, Paris, 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. 35.5 x 23.12 inches. Edition of 8.
Zibuyile, Parktown, 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 19.5 x 12.25 inches. Paper: 23.5 x 16.25 inches. Edition of 8.
Somnyama III, Paris, 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. 31.5 x 23.5 inches. Edition of 8.
Babhekile II, Oslo, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. 23.5 x 19 inches, Edition of 8.
Bona, Charlottesville, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 31.25 x 20 inches. Paper: 35.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8.
Bester V, Mayotte, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 19.75 x 16 inches. Paper: 23.75 x 20 inches. Edition of 8.
Somnyama I, Paris, France 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 31.5 x 20.75 inches. Paper: 35.5 x 24.75 inches (sheet size). Edition of 8.
Bester II, Paris, 2014. Gelatin Silver Print. 35.5 x 26 inches, Edition of 8.
Xana Nyilenda, Los Angeles, (2014). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8. |
Lebo Ntladi, Newtown Johannesburg, (2011). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8. |
Mbali Zulu KwaThema Springs, Johannesburg (2010). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8. |
Vuyelwa Vuvu Makubetse, Daveyton Johannesburg (2013). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8. |
Lesego Masilela Daveyton, Johannesburg (2013). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8 |
Refiloe Pitso Daveyton, Johannesburg (2014). Gelatin Silver Print. Image: 30 x 19.75 inches. Paper: 34.25 x 24 inches. Edition of 8. |
SYSTEMATICALLY OPEN?—New Forms for Contemporary Image Production Somnyama Ngonyama Curated by Zanele Muholi (b. 1972; lives and works in Johannesburg) Drawn from a Zulu phrase meaning "Hail, the Dark Lioness," Somnyama Ngonyama uses stylized self-portraiture as a means to commemorate, question, and celebrate the ways the black body has been represented in photography. Augmented with shells, textiles, and other objects, the artist's diverse coiffures explore hair as symbolic primary material and a central facet of African identity and stylistic expression. An acknowledgement of South Africa's political history and a series of activist networks operating today in the country and elsewhere, Muholi's project comments on aesthetic and cultural issues that affect black people, and specifically black women, in Africa and its diaspora. |
Zinathi: photographs by Zanele Muholi
A Gallatin Student Affairs/Life Black History Month Program: Dismantling the Master's House: The Spectrum of Black Activism. Co-sponsored with The Gallatin Galleries
Reception with the artist Friday, February 26th 5-7 p.m.
Widely considered the leading honor for excellence in the field, the Infinity Awards is ICP's largest annual fundraiser, supporting all of its programs, including exhibitions, education, collections, and community outreach.
Second-Hand Reading: William Kentridge and Zanele Muholi
Kentridge and Muholi offer perspectives on South Africa from two generations.
Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present Somnyama Ngonyama, the debut exhibition of self-portraits by South African artist Zanele Muholi and her second solo exhibition at the gallery. Somnyama Ngonyama, meaning "Hail, the Dark Lioness", represents a newly personal approach taken by Muholi as a visual activist confronting the politics of race and pigment in the photographic archive.
EXHIBITIONS|GROUP SHOWS
"Contact" Casa dei Tre Oci, Venice
September 11, 2015 - January 10, 2016
"Vukani/Rise" Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool
September 18 - November 29
"Making Africa, A Continent of Contemporary Design" Guggenheim, Bilbao
October 23, 2015 - February 21, 2016
May 1 - November 1, 2015.
Isibonelo/Evidence, is the most comprehensive museum exhibition to date in the United States devoted to the critically acclaimed South African artist. The show comprises eighty-seven pieces created between 2007 and 2014, including the renowned Faces and Phases series, an ongoing portrait project that documents the breadth of identities contained within the LGBTI communities of South Africa.
CURRENT GROUP EXHIBITIONS:
Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim, New York, 5 June to 9 September
Read more.
The Order of Things at The Walther Collection, Ulm, Germany through 9 October, 2015
Read more.
Wellcome Collection's The Institute of Sexology, London through September 20, 2015 Read more.
A rotating selection of Muholi's photographs and over 400 works by 200 other artists, architects, and designers in the group show Une Histoire, Art, Architecture et Design Des Annees 80 a Aujoudhui concentrating on art, architecture, and design from the 1980s to today runs through March 2016. Read more.
Work by Zanele Muholi is included in the group exhibition, Contemporary Art / South Africa, at the Yale University Art Gallery, on view through September 14, 2014. The exhibition features work produced in South Africa or by South Africans over the past fifty years, and includes Muholi, William Kentridge, Robin Rhode, and Santu Mofokeng, among others.
Work by Zanele Muholi will feature in the group exhibition Apartheid & After at the Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography in Amsterdam, opening on March 15 and on view through June 8, 2014. Other exhibiting artists include David Goldblatt, Pieter Hugo, Daniel Naude, Guy Tillim, Mikhael Subotzky, and Jo Ractliffe, among others.
A solo exhibition of Zanele Muholi's work is on display at the Williams College Museum of Art in Williamstown, MA, through April 27, 2014, featuring photographs from three separate bodies of work: Faces and Phases (2006-ongoing), Beulahs (2006-2010), and Being (2007).
Gallery artist Zanele Muholi presents an installation of 48 portraits from her acclaimed Faces & Phases series at the 2013 Carnegie International survey of contemporary art, through March 16, 2014 at the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh.
Zanele Muholi will be featured in the South African Pavilion at the 2013 Venice Biennale, curated by Brenton Maart, with the theme Imaginary Fact: South African Art and the Archive. She is included in All You Need is Love at the Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (April 25 - Sept 1), and has been selected for the 2013 Carnegie International survey of contemporary art, opening October 4.
Zanele Muholi is included in The Progress of Love, a collaboration between The Menil Collection, Houston, the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Nigeria, and the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, MO. On view at The Menil Collection through March 17, 2013.