Showing posts with label The Future White Women of Azania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Future White Women of Azania. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2015

The Future White Women of Azania: The Founding Myth, Venice Performance

Future White Women of Azania -  The Founding Myth


The Future White Woman of Azania is an ongoing series of performances first conceived in 2010 and evolving to engage new definitions of nationhood in relation to the autonomous body.

In the enactment of the site-specific work commissioned for the 55th Venice Biennale, the performance takes the form of an absurdist funerary procession. The participants are the ABODADE - the sisterhood order of Azania and the central protagonist - The Future White Woman.

“Azania, as a geographic location, is first described in 1stCentury  Greek records of navigation and trade , The Peryplus of the Erythrean Sea  and is thought to refer to a portion of the East and Southern African coast. The word Azania itself is thought to have been derived from an Arabic  word referring to the ‘dark-skinned inhabitants of Africa.’

Azania is then eulogised in  the black consciousness movement as a pre-colonial utopian black homeland- this Promised Land, referenced in struggle songs, political sermons and African Nationalist speeches. In  Cold War  pop culture , Marvel Comics used  Azania as a fictional backdrop to a Liberation story that bares a close resemblance to the situation that was Apartheid in Old South Africa …  so it is at once a mythical and faintly factual place/state that this performance unfolds… Who are the Azanians for what it’s worth ?  It is in this liminal state that the performance unfolds…“


Seeking to radically reimage the potential of Azania and its inhabitants, the performance questions the mythical place that we mourn for and asks who its future inhabitants may be. Using the “Nation-Finding  language of pomp and procession” , Ruga proposes a bold and iconoclastic  break with the past Utopian promise of the elders and instead presents us with a new potential and hybridity . 


HELLO? Paranoia much...

The Future White Women of Azania: The Trial, a performance art work by Athi-Patra Ruga.

Photos: Giovanna Zen
- See more at: http://www.visi.co.za/content/article/2331/venice-in-fact#sthash.f0j35ufS.dpuf


Monday, January 19, 2015

Athi-Patra Ruga presents : THE F.W.W.O.A. Saga @ Whatiftheworld Solo Show



UNOZUKO, 2013
Wool, thread and artificial flowers on tapestry canvas
195 x 180 cm

 



THE LORD IS ON THE LOOP, 2013
Wool, and thread on tapestry canvas
190 x 180 cm

 


TRUST NO BITCH, 2013

Wool, thread, glue and glitter on tapestry canvas

190 x 120 cm



THUD OF A SNOW FLAKE, 2013

Artificial flowers, glue on high density foam



THE PHOENIX IS A CHICKEN, 2013

Wool and thread on tapestry canvas

170 x 190 cm


LANDS OF AZANIA, 2014-2094

Thread on tapestry canvas

200 x 180 cm




INVITATION... PRESENTATION... INDUCTION, 2013

Wool and thread on tapestry canvas

300 x 175 cm










THE VERSATILE QUEEN IVY, 2013

Wool and thread on tapestry canvas

180 x 120 cm


CONVENTION... PROCESSION... ELEVATION... , 2013

Wool and thread on tapestry canvas

300 x 175cm


THE VOTIVE PORTRAIT OF HER, 2013

Wool on tapestry canvas

190 x 130 cm








AT THE OPENING OF ATHI-PATRA RUGA'S FUTURE WHITE WOMEN OF AZANIA SAGA via SKATTIE


Monday, December 2, 2013
Words by Malibongwe of SKATTIE WHAT ARE YOU WEARING?

AT THE OPENING OF ATHI-PATRA RUGA'S FUTURE WHITE WOMEN OF AZANIA SAGA

I snapped these last week at Whatiftheworld at the opening of Athi’s new solo show. This one was a bit of a family affair so I’m not gonna go on and on about how mind-blowingly amazing it is to behold because some of y’all skeptic skatties are gonna assume I’m biased anyway. Thankfully the show does not at all need my help; it’s pretty fucking awesome. The pieces will be up until the 8th of Feb, so if you haven’t seen it yet I recommend you pay the gallery a visit. For those who might not be familiar with Athi’s technique; those are hand embroidered tapestries (obvs except the photos, stained glass piece and installation), and you need to do yourself a favour and stand in front of one to fully appreciate their awesomeness. For now though, enjoy the images.