|
Monday, November 17, 2014
7:00 pm
program | 8:15 pm reception
Doors open
at 6:45 pm
Tickets ($35 General Admission, $20 Members, $12 Students) may be purchased at the Museum information and film desks, online at MoMA.org, or through The Friends of Education Office.
The
Celeste Bartos Theater (Theater 3)
The Lewis
B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research Building
4 West 54th
Street
New York,
NY
From moma.org:
Presented
by The Friends of Education of The Museum of Modern Art as part of the series Conversations: Among Friends, this
evening's program features a conversation between artist Zanele Muholi and
actress, director, and playwright Nomonde Mbusi, moderated by Judith B. Hecker,
MoMA's assistant curator for drawings and prints. The program will focus on
Muholi’s work as a "visual activist" dedicated to issues of race,
gender, and sexuality, and will reflect on this year’s 20th anniversary of
democracy in South Africa—still a work in progress. Muholi is best known for
her photographic series Faces and Phases, five of which are in MoMA’s
collection. Begun in 2006, this series portrays black members of the LGBTI
community in South Africa and around the world, giving voice to their stories
and displacing conventional perceptions. Nomonde Mbusi, one of Muholi’s
participants in Faces and Phases and an artist and activist in her own right,
joins the discussion. Following the program, guests are invited to continue the
conversation at an intimate reception catered by Fantasy Fare in The Cullman Mezzanine.
Muholi’s newest book, Zanele Muholi: Faces and Phases 2006–2014 (The Walther
Collection/Steidl 2014) will be available for purchase and signing by the
artist.
Zanele Muholi was born in 1972 in Umlazi township in Durban, South Africa, and currently
lives in Johannesburg. Prior to her photographic journeys, she worked as a
human rights activist, raising issues facing black lesbian women in South
Africa. In 2009 she founded Inkanyiso, an organization centered on visual arts,
activism, media, and advocacy. Muholi studied at the Market Photo Workshop in
Johannesburg, and graduated from Ryerson University in Toronto in 2009 with an
MFA in documentary media. She is the winner of awards from the 2009 Rencontres
de Bamako African Photography Biennial; the 2013 Carnegie International; and
recipient of a 2013 Prince Claus Award. Muholi’s work has been featured in the
55th Venice Biennale; Documenta 13; the 29th São Paulo Biennial; and has been
shown at prestigious museums worldwide. Her work can be found in numerous
museum collections including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art; South African National Gallery, Cape Town; Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris; Tate Modern, London; The Menil Collection, Houston; and The
Walther Collection, Neu-Ulm, Germany; among others. Her award-winning
documentary Difficult Love (2010) has been shown at film festivals around the
world.
Nomonde
Mbusi was trained in dramatic arts at the University of Zululand. Since 1997,
she has performed in numerous theater productions and is best known for her
role as Fikile in Flipping the Script, a four women show on gender-based
violence (2004-07). In 2004 she cofounded Insika Productions with Muholi, where
she worked as artistic director and facilitator. Through Insika, she organized
creative arts healing workshops for women survivors of violence in
organizations such as POWA-People Opposing Women Abuse and FEW-Forum for the
Empowerment of Women. Her recent acting accomplishments include the lead role
of Brenda on SABC 1’s drama Usindiso (Redemption), and Thando in Dr. John
Kani’s play Nothing but The Truth at the Soweto Theatre, along with several
other television and radio performances.
Judith B.
Hecker, Assistant Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints at MoMA, organized
Impressions from South Africa, 1965 to Now: Prints from The Museum of Modern
Art (2011), which featured some 80 prints, artist’s books, posters, and wall
stencils by artists living in South Africa that were acquired by the Museum.
She co-curated MoMA’s presentation of the touring exhibition William Kentridge:
Five Themes (2010), and authored the accompanying publication Trace: William
Kentridge, Prints from The Museum of Modern Art.
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