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exhibition

October 2010

Cold Sweat (The Graphic works) University of Johannesburg Art Gallery, South Africa. Director: Annali Cabano-Dempsey.
www.uj.ac.za

September 2009

Cold Sweat (The Graphic works) with Vulindlela Nyoni. ArtSPACE, Durban. Director: Karen Bradtke
www.artspace durban.co.za

September 2009

Cold Sweat (The Graphic Works)Cultivaria. Off the Wall Contemporary, Paarl 
Director: Wendy Roux
www.offthewall contemporary.com

August 2009

Group show with Judy Woodborne & Paul Birchal. Rust & Vrede Gallery. Belville, Cape Town, South Africa. www.rust-en-vrede.com

24 July 2009

Cold Sweat (The Graphic works). Focus Contemporary | Fine Young Art. Les Arcs Draguignan, French Riviera, France.
www.focus contemporary.co.za

 

 

 

exhibitions > cold sweat  > GALLERY

Exodus: Ship of Fools

Exodus: Ship of Fools. Chris Diedericks. Drypoint printed on Arches Johannot 240gsm paper. 28cm diameter. 2009. Ed: 25.

The ship of fools is an allegory that has long been a fixture and reminder in Western literature and art. The allegory depicts a vessel populated by human inhabitants who are deranged, frivolous, or oblivious, passengers aboard a ship without a pilot, and seemingly ignorant of their own direction. This concept makes up the framework of the 15th century book Ship of Fools (1494) by Sebastian Brant, which served as the inspiration for Bosch's famous painting, Ship of Fools: a ship—an entire fleet at first—sets off from Basel to the paradise of fools. In literary and artistic compositions of the 15th and 16th centuries, the cultural motif of the ship of fools also served to parody the 'ark of salvation' (as the Catholic Church was styled).

Michel Foucault, in "Madness and Civilization", claimed that "ships of fools" were used as primitive concentration camps, to dispose of people having mental disorders. He further claims that these ships were routinely denied permission to dock anywhere, and thus were stranded at sea, sailing endlessly from port to port. There is no evidence, however, that such ships ever actually existed, and some have argued that Foucault had misinterpreted accounts that were originally intended to be figurative, fanciful, or allegorical.

My work Exodus: Ship of Fools explores issues of emigration, asylum, running away and/or escape. The work is however not only a visual comment on people leaving South Africa for so-called “greener pastures”, but also the “fools” in power, harming such a beautiful country from the inside; desperately trying to keep this ship afloat. A sub-text in the work is the beautiful irony that the latter is applicable to South Africa both in a historical and contemporary context.

Bibliography

<<  September 23, 2009


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