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William Kentridge show brings African drama to Hamburg

October 28, 2020

William Kentridge is South Africa's best-known artist. But what makes his work so alluring? An exhibition in Hamburg finds out by tracing each stroke of his brush.

https://p.dw.com/p/3kJvC
Südafrika Kunst ll Ausstellung «Kunstkompass» - William Kentridge
Image: Kristin Palitza/dpa/picture-alliance

William Kentridge: Why Should I Hesitate

The question "What is African Art?" elicits myriad responses from each of the continent's 54 countries. But in the context of South Africa, the question is especially complicated by its colonial past and the more recent apartheid era.

Under the oppressive rule of that system, European styles were idealized in South Africa as the gold standard of art and traditional African techniques and designs were denigrated by the regime as "primitive." 

But much has changed since the country's transition to democracy in 1994, with Black artists enjoying a lively renaissance.

Read more: South Africa: the state of the arts 25 years after apartheid

Though William Kentridge is a white contemporary artist, the South African trailblazer has sought not only to shine a light on the crimes of the apartheid era with his prints, drawings and animation films, but also to contextualize their background through storytelling.  

Deichtorhallen Hamburg I William Kentridge I  Espagne Ancienne 2005
Kentridge has more recently been exploring tapestry as an artistic medium - some of which can be seen in HamburgImage: William Kentridge

The Deichtorhallen Museum in Hamburg is now showing one of the biggest Kentridge retrospectives ever, titled "Why Should I Hesitate: Putting Drawing to Work." Following a successful run at the Zeitz-MOCAA Museum in Cape Town last year, the exhibition brings hundreds of Kentridge's works to Germany, many of which will be seen in the country for the first time, recounting the career of one of the world's most prolific contemporary artists.

Facing up to tyranny

The artist was born in 1955 into a family of prominent "struggle-era" activists and lawyers who fought tirelessly against apartheid for decades. His father even defended Nelson Mandela and 90 others in the so-called Treason Trial of 1956, and 20 years later led the inquiry into the death of Black activist Steve Biko after he was beaten to death by apartheid regime state security officers.

Growing up in a Jewish South African family in the postwar era also likely helped William Kentridge see the world through a different lens than many of his contemporaries in his hometown, Johannesburg. He studied politics and African history to make sense of his life — only to discover that the answers he sought often evaded him.

Several of his family members meanwhile chose to emigrate from South Africa in the 1960s, unable to bear the injustices of the apartheid regime. Kentridge was barely a youth at the time, but says that he decided that by leaving his country he would not escape the burden of taking responsibility for the tyranny in his homeland.

Whites Only sign in Johannesburg
Kentridge's childhood and formative years in Johannesburg during the apartheid later informed most aspects of his artistic careerImage: Cover/Getty Images

Exploring white privilege

Throughout nearly half a century working as an artist, Kentridge has sought to address how he inadvertently did benefit, as a white South African, from the exploitative apartheid system.

Especially in his earlier works, Kentridge explores his unique place in the world, somewhere between being a victim of an evil system and yet being a part of its machinery. This questioning was apparent through his white alter-egos Soho Eckstein and Felix Teitlebaum — caricatures of white men in Johannesburg come alive through an animation he created.

Eckstein takes his privilege for granted and appears to recklessly consume the world around him no matter the cost, while Teitlebaum seems to benefit little and thus rather sympathizes with the underdog. 

As the years progress, however, Teitlebaum and Eckstein discover that they have more in common than meets the eye: they actually are two sides of the same coin. They need each other in order to define who they are. They are placeholders for the "white guilt" that Kentridge and others felt and still feel to this day.

Kentridge show in Hamburg

The artist as chronicler

Drawing being the basis of nearly all of Kentridge's work, his depictions of various realities throughout African history are both abstract and representational of concrete issues, events, moments, places and people.

Deichtorhallen curator Dirk Luckow says that Kentridge recounts "great dramas of history" with a sense of ease that is almost at odds with what he is actually depicting. The black-and-white nature of the vast majority of his works reflect this tension in a rather literal manner, yet the meaning and depth behind them are far from being monochrome.

It hardly comes as a surprise then that the artist has also more than just dabbled in directing plays and operas — though the visual arts remain the backbone of his artistic work.

This is why Kentridge's signature style is practically impossible to replicate. He manages to build mystery and purpose onto even the blandest of landscapes in his drawings, paintings, tapestries, sculptures and installations, adding new dimensions to the parched industrial wastelands surrounding Johannesburg and Pretoria that often background his oeuvre.

So while there is always a clear intention behind his works, the artist gives plenty of room for interpretation and reflection — as is the case with the 2018 video installation Kaboom! that deals with the colonial history of the African continent.

Layers of drama

Kentridge likes to take his viewers on a journey — so much so that the term "audience" is more fitting for those who encounter his art. He produces layers upon layers of work on a single surface, using materials that can reach from chalk and charcoal to shoe polish and sewing machines. The erasure of layers plays as important a role in that journey as the creation of new layers itself. 

Meanwhile, many of his video installations in particular allow the viewer to actually partake in the creation process as well. Kentridge's own fingers are seen drawing, painting and wiping off layers, adding a further level of drama to the narrative that is unfolding on whatever surface he is working on.

The perspective of his storytelling is always filmed from above, showing the artist's hands and arms only. It's a birds-eye view bordering on god-like omniscience, but also voyeurism. 

Kentridge's own hands also feel like they're an extension of the individual viewer reaching into the projected videos. The audience thus becomes a co-creator in these cartoonish stop-motion video recordings, while following the plan and the path of the artist — much like a guided meditation.

This can be seen in works as Ubu Tells the Truth, a cinematic video installation accompanied by drawings from 1997 that was partly inspired by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission set up to assess the crimes and human rights violations of the apartheid era.

The master of nostalgia

Another feature of Kentridge's signature style is his ability to evoke a sense of nostalgia for places and things that outsiders might not commonly relate to. From the assassination of director Pier Paolo Pasolini (Triumphs and Laments, 2016) to the exiled life of Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky in Istanbul (O Sentimental Machine, 2015), his journeys tap into the shared consciousness of the human condition. Luckow calls these artistic journeys, "sensual time travel."

Deichtorhallen Hamburg I William Kentridge I  More Sweetly Play the Dance, 2015
'More Sweetly Play the Dance' is a procession through Africa's history that moves and fascinates its audienceImage: Courtesy William Kentridge Studio/Studio Hans Wilschut

The multimedia installation More Sweetly Play The Dance stretches across seven canvasses along nearly 40 meters, showing a procession of silhouettes that highlights various contemporary issues rooted in centuries of exploitation across Africa. Kentridge took inspiration for the work from Africa's Ebola outbreak, but spins narratives way beyond this tragedy to offer a holistic perspective on contemporary Africa.

From disease to political strife to tribal dance to slavery, the massive artwork chronicles the history of an entire continent by projecting shadows onto an ever-changing "veld" that seems to be suspended somewhere beyond time and space.

Are these silhouettes descending onto Johannesburg, South Africa's "city of gold," to try to make as honest a living as they can in the mines? Or are they being chased by traumas of the past?

But instead of lamenting the suffering of the centuries, the slow drama unfolding on the screens is juxtaposed by a beautiful tune played by the African Essemblies Brass Band from Sharpeville — the site of one the biggest apartheid-era massacres, located just outside Johannesburg.

Riding scales on various brass instruments and referencing kaiso rhythms in the music, the video installation will make its audience feel like they are revisiting a long-lost place they once knew. Simultaneously, however, this masterpiece also features that typical meditative quality of Kentridge's works that invokes a feeling of only belonging to the here and now —  which is, of course, no single place or point in time at all.

William Kentridge
The opening of the Kentridge retrospective in Hamburg had to be moved twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic - but the artist didn't mindImage: Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung / Norbert Miguletz

"Why Should I Hesitate: Putting Drawing to Work" runs through April 18, 2021 at the Deichtorhallen Museum in Hamburg

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Sertan Sanderson DW journalist & human seeking to make sense of the world and understand what motivates other humansSertanSanderson