Tiwani Contemporary is pleased to present Confluence, Robel Temesgen’s second solo exhibition at the gallery. In recent years, Temesgen’s practice has been concerned with developing a visual language for the spiritual and depicting the lived experiences of particular Ethiopian landscapes. In the current exhibition, the artist creates a convergence of seemingly disparate concepts, the spiritual and the political, which, on closer examination avail themselves to the possibility of a nuanced allegiance. The exhibition is an investigation into the appropriation of spiritual gatherings, such as the Ethiopian Irreecha thanksgiving holiday, into occasions for political protest. Temesgen takes his longstanding depiction and influence of the sacred place Hora Harsadi, which often culminated in representations of a spiritual and mental landscape, and imagines the natural progression of the space as an occasion for necessary acts of activism. The exhibition sees Temesgen return to his motif – with the use of acrylic, ink, pencil, permanent marker and nail polish – to depict abstract biological matter in different states of growth. The diptych, Untitled, is an ambiguous exploration of the subjectivity of place, landscape and form. Its resemblance of either a human form, internal organs or natural matter depicts a dreamlike entity through bold representative colours such as green, black and red, to speak to issues of fertility, godliness and rebirth.
In addition to his customary paintings and works on paper, Confluence sees an inclusion of handwritten newspapers that assist the union of the spiritual and the political. Due to the use of the specifically Ethiopian language Ahmaric in the publications, Temesgen grapples with the context specificity of his subject matter and imagines its ability to traverse geographical confines and communicate meaningfully to a broader audience. By so doing, he activates a moment of detaching the subject matter from the form to the extent that the form becomes the content itself. The handwritten newspapers, and the broader exhibition, invite issues of access, the possibility for public gathering, and the need for a self-imposed censorship that is influenced by the fear of the state.
Exhibition Tour
Robel Temesgen and curator Portia Malatjie leading a tour of the exhibition
Thursday 25 January 2018, 6pm Free event, no booking required.