SMAC Art Gallery 01

Elizabeth Gunter


Listings(s)

'Fragile Histories' and 'Fugitive Lives'

Keith Dietrich and Elizabeth Gunter at Brundyn

Brunduyn + Gonsalves presents a dual exhibition by Keith Dietrich and Elizabeth Gunter.

Keith Dietrich’s Fragile Histories may be viewed as a kind of “book” comprising four sections or “volumes” that narrate the tensions and textures of early colonial encounters at the Cape in South Africa. The work alludes to the rich though unsettled histories of the people who inhabited this heterogeneous space; a space characterised by astonishing cultural, linguistic and religious diversity. Amidst this melting pot were the indigenous Khoi and San people, Chinese and European visitors and settlers, slaves born at the Cape and also from greater Africa, the Indian subcontinent and the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), Dutch East Indian political exiles and convicts, free blacks; and the offspring resulting from the mixing of these groups.

The only traces of these people that remain are in the form of court records of trials at the Cape. Fragile Histories is informed by a set of trials that took place during the 1700s, and in particular by the atrocious sentences that were meted out for transgressions against a social order in which these people found themselves. The evocative images in Dietrich’s photomontage triptychs inscribe and map texts from these trials over the body, with agony and sorrow depicted as rays of energy radiating outwards from bodily organs.

In Fugitive Lives Elizabeth Gunter examines themes of duality within birth and death and the quiet violence imbued in the notion that the first step towards one’s death begins with birth. The exhibition juxtaposes exquisitely rendered large graphite and charcoal dust drawings with delicate small-scale sculptures cast in polyurethane, wax or silicone. This juxtaposition is extended into the thematic content of the works themselves through Gunter’s intimate depictions of animals such as the rhinoceros, elephant, and buffalo. Once fully grown, these animals have connotations to size, strength and might. Here however, they are depicted in the vulnerable foetal stages of their development, existing within a liminal pre-birth space. In this way, Gunter shifts dichotomies such as small/big, soft/hard, birth/death, beginning/end, weakness/strength and fleetingness/endurance to the point where their divisions become permeable membranes as opposed to impenetrable seals. Oppositional materialities become metaphors for immaterialities that drive our relationships with animals.


10 October 2012 - 21 November 2012