Zambia Thu 10-07-2008

Regeneration
By Pam Ghurs

An exhibition by Pam Guhrs-Carr @ RaMoMa Museum of Modern Art in Nairobi, Kenya.

Pam Guhrs born in Malawi and raised in Zambia in one of Africa’s prolific wildlife area the Luangwa valley. Living in Luangwa’s remote wilderness environment has informed her work on multiple levels as she draws on its history, indigenous cultures and biodiversity.

Pam GuhrsIn this context she was exposed to and deeply immersed into the Kunda subsistence way of life which has become part of her lived experience and has shaped her identity, so much so that her two daughters are both initiated as Kunda.

The Kunda people who live in Luangwa River valley, are outnumbered by an abundant population of wild animals including lions and elephants.

Unable to keep livestock due to sleeping sickness, and isolated by flooding for half the year, they have historically survived by hunting and subsistence farming. There are six Kunda chiefs, one of whom is Paramount.

The notion of the artist as an individual is a quintessentially western one and bore no relation to Guhrs’ local experience, which meant she was forced to question her western art education.

Fascinated by the fact that in African art the importance is placed on anonymity and that the process is more important than the product, she embarked on an intensive nine year field research study.

While learning about Kunda women’s initiation art in Luangwa she discovered its relation to rock images in Eastern Zambia

These lime and tar paintings on this show are a reverberation of the Zambian rock paintings that inspired them. Guhrs’ artwork aims not for representation but rather acts as a vehicle for channelling the sensations and emotions evoked by the rock art and by the Kunda initiation objects to which they relate.

“I am fascinated by how the rock paintings correspond to complex philosophical concepts that are represented as minimal abstract signs. Much of the initiation teaching to the young girls deals with issues concerning social and spiritual life.

It is also about coping with life, loss, death, birth and there is always as element of regenerative transformation - that suffering may result in healing.

Animals too are often used to represent different aspects of transformation“. These are issues that have always pervaded my own art”, says Guhrs.

The elemental materials used such as tar and lime, both subject to chemical changes, used in Guhrs’ paintings reflect these concepts of transformation and regeneration.

By learning these images through repetition she aims not to reproduce or to document them but to try to understand them. The process becomes more important than the product.

Through the process of repetition she learns, and this becomes part of her in the same way as one would internalise a piece of music, in a mode of reworking these images with closed eyes, in a meditative state, in a manner described by Berggruen, where the inner and outer world, the observer and the thing are merged

Regeneration by Pam Ghurs

Regeneration | 133x26 |Oil on Canvas

Using Indian ink and a large brush these images are drawn repeatedly with a tutored hand and then later with eyes closed, until the figure becomes a cipher.

Closing the eyes releases the unconscious gesture or the underlying emotive aspects of the form. The replication of painting and repainting simplifies the sign in a Zen-like way until it is personalised. There is an intensity of labour necessary to capture this apparent spontaneity.

There is here an attempt to grasp on a level of feeling rather than visual superficiality. These gestural images resembling a type of calligraphy are then enlarged in a manner related to western technical drawing, by a series of grids. The resulting drawings are completed in tar with a large brush.

ANIMALS

“I am interested in the different cultural perceptions of nature and people’s place in it…the shifting boundaries between animals and humans represented in indigenous knowledge systems… Animals often become metaphors for universal concerns - cycles of life, birth, death etc. or are used in a shamanistic way, as a conduit to a different state of consciousness“.

Night Prowler by Pam Ghurs

Night prowler | 81x78 | Oil on Canvas | Sold

Hyena Eclipse by Pam Ghurs

Hyena Eclipse | 85x70 cm | Oil on Canvas

Pam Guhrs- Carr show is open to the public from the 9th of July till the 9th of August 2008.

Posted By: .

skip to top

Bookmark and Share

Your Comments

Names:

Email:

Commment:

 
skip to top

African Artists Portfolios

Medie  Mulindwa is a Fine Artist
Fallow Dolly is a Fine Artist
Ayo Adewunmi is a Fine Artist
Olonde Omondi is a Cartoonist
Beatrice  Njoroge is a Mixed Media Artist
Ronex Ahimbisibwe is a Mixed Media Artist
Chuka Machie is a Fine Artist
Mieke van Grinsven is a Sculptor
Kingsley Iyamu is a Fine Artist
Ephrem Solomon is a Fine Artist
Chokri Ben-Amor is a Fine Artist
Geraldine  Robarts is a Mixed Media Artist
Mito Elias is a Fine Artist
Marcela Costa is a Mixed Media Artist
Leena Shah is a Mixed Media Artist
Ezekiel Madiba is a Printer
Larissa Hoops is a Fine Artist
Louis Epee is a Mixed Media Artist
Jimoh Akinloye    is a Mixed Media Artist
Keddy Tandi is a Fine Artist
Hannah Uzor is a Fine Artist
Guy Compaore is a Sculptor
Willis Otieno is a Mixed Media Artist
Mia Collis is a Photographer
Fatric Bewong  is a Fine Artist
Tamar Mason is a Mixed Media Artist
Mary Collis is a Fine Artist
Maggie Otieno is a Sculptor
Mulangala Mwamba is a Fine Artist
Henry Mujunga is a Fine Artist
Click To View All African Artist Portfolios

Kaafiri Kariuki at the Creativity Gallery

Shades of Time: An exhibition by Kaafiri Kariuki at the Creativity Gallery National Museum of Kenya

News By Regions

Featured Artist Portfolio

Title: Making Ways
Name: Tabitha Wa Thuku
Country: Kenya
Medium: Mixed media on heavy canvas
Size: 149 X 140 cms
Click here to view

News

Goodman Gallery Response to Threat of Censorship from the ANC
Samuel Githui's 'Zebra Crossing' @ The One Off Gallery
Nomthunzi Mashalaba Presents 'Mamiya'
Portraits for Self Determining Haiti
Word: Future Tense. An Exhibition by Wosene Worke Kosrof

Features

Common Misconceptions Artists Have About Galleries
In Conversation with James Barnor, in Comparison with Malick Sidibé
Gor Soudan & Paul Onditi's 'Another World is Possible'
The Politics of Exclusion: The Undue Fixation of Western-Based African Curators on Contemporary Africa Diaspora Artists-A Critique
An Arts Renaissance in Johannesburg

Editorials

How African Sculpture Influences Modern Art
Interrogating Western Paradigms: Rethinking Authencity in African Art
Should Artists Accept “Dirty Money”?
Art as an Expression: Are artists part of “the problem”?
Development as a Destroyer of Culture: Demolition of Uganda National Museum

News From External Sources

Davidkrut.book.co.za: Special Collection: TAXI Art Book Series
Herald.co.zw: Publishers Challenged to Produce African Art Books
Herald.co.zw: Transforming Colonial Legacy Through Art
Culturemap.com: Faces of Kings
Culture24.org.uk: Brighton Photo Biennial 2010

Exhibitions

Conrad Botes at the KZNSA Gallery

Follow Us On....

Facebook
skip to top
Look

Edcross Fine Art
Art South Africa
Mocada
National Museum Of African Art
Creative African Network
African Art Online
 
Learn

Culture.info
Hivos
Arterial Network
Doen
Blogs

Art's Own Kind
AACHRONYM
Contemporary Arts in Northern Nigeria
Lifestyle & Design

Contemporist
Dwell
Wallpaper*
Cape Craft Design
Moco Loco

Site Map

Contact Us

User Agreement

Privacy Policy

Links & Resources

RSS

FAQ

Home

About Us

Africa Art News

© 2000 - 2010 AfricanColours.
Hosting by Outdare