William Kentridge
15 Nov - 20 Dec 2014
© William Kentridge
Untitled (40) PART OF SET OF 5, 2014
Charcoal on ledger book paper from the Central Administration Mine Cash Book 1906
42.5 x 61.5cm
Untitled (40) PART OF SET OF 5, 2014
Charcoal on ledger book paper from the Central Administration Mine Cash Book 1906
42.5 x 61.5cm
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE
Drawings: East Rand Proprietary Mines Cash Book
15 November - 20 December 2014
The exhibition consists of approximately 45 landscape drawings, mainly made from mining landscapes around Johannesburg.
The drawings are made on the pages of an old cash book from East Rand Proprietary Mines from 1906 (with a few from other mine ledgers), in which the text under the drawings, either covered or glimpsed, is an important part of the history of the drawing. What is hidden by the landscape? What traces are left in the landscape by the actions upon it? In what way does nature reclaim this damaged ground and erase its history?
The drawings were done over a three year period, and range from the East Rand to the platinum belt. Accompanying the exhibition is a launch of a book which reproduces the drawings and includes a text by Rosalind Morris, Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. Part detective story, part archival history, part anthropological reverie, Morris’s text reads between the lines to find evidence of the vast webs that linked South Africa to other parts of Africa, China, the United States, and Australia in an early moment of the globalizing economy.
Drawings: East Rand Proprietary Mines Cash Book
15 November - 20 December 2014
The exhibition consists of approximately 45 landscape drawings, mainly made from mining landscapes around Johannesburg.
The drawings are made on the pages of an old cash book from East Rand Proprietary Mines from 1906 (with a few from other mine ledgers), in which the text under the drawings, either covered or glimpsed, is an important part of the history of the drawing. What is hidden by the landscape? What traces are left in the landscape by the actions upon it? In what way does nature reclaim this damaged ground and erase its history?
The drawings were done over a three year period, and range from the East Rand to the platinum belt. Accompanying the exhibition is a launch of a book which reproduces the drawings and includes a text by Rosalind Morris, Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. Part detective story, part archival history, part anthropological reverie, Morris’s text reads between the lines to find evidence of the vast webs that linked South Africa to other parts of Africa, China, the United States, and Australia in an early moment of the globalizing economy.