Landscapes between Then and Now: Recent Histories in Southern African Photography, Performance and Video Art
Description
(Photography, Place, Environment) 1st Edition
by Nicola Brandt (Author)
In Landscapes Between Then and Now, Nicola Brandt examines the increasingly compelling and diverse cross-disciplinary work of photographers and artists made during the transition from apartheid to post-apartheid and into the contemporary era.
By examining specific artworks made in South Africa, Namibia and Angola, Brandt sheds light on established and emerging themes related to aftermath landscapes, embodied histories, (un)belonging, spirituality and memorialization. She shows how landscape and identity are mutually constituted, and profiles this process against the background of the legacy of the acutely racially divisive policies of the apartheid regime that are still reflected on the land. As a signpost throughout the book, Brandt draws on the work of the renowned South African photographer Santu Mofokeng and his critical thinking about landscape.
Landscapes Between Then and Now
explores how practitioners who engage with identity and their physical
environment as a social product might reveal something about the complex
and fractured nature of postcolonial and contemporary societies.
Through diverse strategies and aesthetics, they comment on inherent
structures and epistemologies of power whilst also expressing new and
radical forms of self-determinism. Brandt asks why these
cross-disciplinary works ranging from social documentary to experimental
performance and embodied practices are critical now, and what important
possibilities for social and political reflection and engagement they
suggest.