And she was wearing trousers: a call to our heroines – Public Program
Public Program curated by Roberta Joy Rich and Naomi Velaphi
Online Events
Artist Talk 1: Call and Response: Dialogues and making across continents
Saturday 16 July, 5.30pm AEST – 90 minutes
Roberta Joy Rich in conversation with artists Jabu Nadia Newman, Rara Zulu, Kirsty Marillier and blk banaana
Artist Talk 2: When art meets the music: Reflections on Black archiving
Wednesday 20 July, 6pm AEST – 60 minutes
Samira Farah and Zara Julius in conversation
Artist Talk 3: Matriarchs and knowledge systems: past, present and future
Saturday 23 July, 5.30pm AEST – 60 minutes
Naomi Velaphi in conversation with artists Sethembile Msezane and Tariro Mavondo
Artist Talks will be Auslan Interpreted
Tickets
Artist Talks are FREE
Artists come together for discussions reflecting upon the their artworks inspired by archives of Southern African women.
Running alongside the powerful exhibition And she was wearing trousers: a call to our heroines as a series of online talks will take us deep into the minds behind the art and feminist archives of Africa’s south.
The artists of this program will discuss their processes and practice. Themes of their work will include ideas of absence, trace and residue, call and response, and spirituality.
What are the legacies of these women? How do we remember them? How do we take action today? How can collaborative practice create a space for healing and connection?
These questions and more will be explored in dialogue and performance across the program.
Online Events
Artist Talk 1: Call and Response: Dialogues and making across continents
Saturday 16 July, 5.30pm AEST
Roberta Joy Rich in conversation with artists Jabu Nadia Newman, Rara Zulu, Kirsty Marillier and blk banaana
Join co-curator Roberta Joy Rich in conversation with local and international artists Rara Zulu, Kirsty Marillier, Jabu Nadia Newman and blk banaana, reflecting and sharing about their creative process across shores. A curatorial theme within the exhibition, ‘Call and Response’ endeavours to engage in cross continent dialogues between African diaspora and African artists of the southern region. At the genesis of And she was wearing trousers, Roberta and co-curator Naomi Velaphi initiated research of southern African heroines and their legacies as a platform for inquiry into art making. African continent based artists, Jabu Nadia Newman and blk banaana respond to the works of Kirsty Marillier and Rara Zulu. Call and Response: Dialogues and making across continents delves deeper into process, relationships to heroines and the significance of connecting community across shores.
Artist Talk 2: When art meets the music: Reflections on Black archiving
Wednesday 20 July, 6pm AEST
Samira Farah and Zara Julius in conversation
Join local broadcaster and curator Samira Farah with South African based artist and selector Zara Julius in conversation about the impact of southern African women in music and working within such archives. Beginning with Nontsikelelo Mutiti’s work Memeza that employs archives of Brenda Fassie images, to the title of the exhibition And she was wearing trousers, a lyric from a Dorothy Masuka song, Samira and Zara converse together about their experiences navigating African sound archives. Both known for their practices with sound archives, the two traverse archives that are often held in monolithic institutions, compromised by colonial methodologies, or research alternative frameworks, seeing past media and reductive narratives to find and unearth the strength and spirit of African histories. Samira and Zara discuss how such archives not only allow artists an opportunity to reanimate and create new work, but are integral for access to such knowledge for the descendents of their respective and relative communities.
Artist Talk 3: Matriarchs and knowledge systems: Past, present and future
Saturday 23 July, 5.30pm AEST
Naomi Velaphi in conversation with artists Sethembile Msezane and Tariro Mavondo
Join co-curator Naomi Velaphi in conversation with local artist Tariro Mavondo and South Africa based artist Sethembile Msezane discuss the significance and presence of African women and African knowledges that motivated the creation of their works presented within And she was wearing trousers. As artists both influenced by performance practice and matriarchal figures they will unpack how traditional knowledge, artmaking and power intersect. What voices are centered through this process and what are the challenges of presenting feminist work as Bla(c) k women?
About the Artists
Roberta Joy Rich and Naomi Velaphi
Roberta Joy Rich and Naomi Velaphi are southern African diaspora women who work as artists, curators and producers in settler nation Australia. They share a vision to learn and unearth the histories of their mother-lands. Most recently, they have revelled in discovering stories of dynamic heroines and their legacies.
Naomi and Roberta’s practices over a sustained period of time have shared interests that have brought the two together, working collaboratively for the past 4 years. They continue to explore their relationships with southern African archives and the significant feminists within these. Naomi and Roberta explore the proximities they share with these women, and ask, ‘Who are the feminists of our southern African culture? How do we hear of them? And what do we learn from them?’
Artists
blk banaana
Duduetsang Lamola (artist name ‘blk banaana’) is a South African multidisciplinary artist working with handmade and digital collage, video art and installation. Her practice explores visualising fragmentation and speculative reconstruction through collage, reimagining notions of time, place, space, identity, being and belonging produced by Western historical, anthropologic and algorithmic forces.
As an emerging artist, she has collaborated with many artists and organisations in South Africa and globally, over the past two years, working as both a designer and artistic collaborator.
Kirsty Marillier
Kirsty Marillier is a South African actor and award-winning playwright. She is currently a part of the Emerging Writers Group at Sydney Theatre Company and has two original works in development. Her first work, Orange Thrower, had its stage premiere in February 2022 with Griffin Theatre Company and National Theatre of Parramatta. Orange Thrower was the winner of the 2019 Rodney Seaborn Playwrights Award.
Kirsty is currently in development with Belvoir St Theatre for her second play – The Zap, winner of the 2020 Max Afford Playwrights Award, which was developed with Playwriting Australia and Darlinghurst Theatre Company’s Next In Line program. She has been a part of multiple creative programs including Griffin Theatre Company’s Studio Artist Program (2020), Sydney Theatre Company’s Rough Draft Program (2019) and Malthouse Theatre’s Besen Writers Group (2018).
Tariro Mavondo
Based in Melbourne, Tariro is a multi-disciplinary storyteller, theatre maker, curator, cultural diversity and performance consultant, performance facilitator across performing arts, education, government, mental health, law enforcement and social justice. She graduated in 2011 from the Victorian College of the Arts with a Bachelor of Dramatic Arts, and received the Irene Mitchell Award for excellence in her final year.
Tariro has co-directed theatre productions that have been seen at the Malthouse Theatre and Arts Centre Melbourne. She was an Australian Poetry Slam National Finalist (2010) and State Finalist (2009), the founder and producer of Africa’s Got Talent (2013–2014) and a founding member of Still Waters African Women’s Storytelling Collective and Centre of Poetic Justice.
Sethembile Msezane
Sethembile Msezane was born in 1991 in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. She lives and works in Cape Town, South Africa. She was awarded a Masters in Fine Arts in 2017 from the Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town. Msezane’s work has been widely exhibited across South Africa and internationally. Using interdisciplinary practice encompassing performance, photography, film, sculpture and drawing, Msezane creates commanding works heavy with spiritual and political symbolism. The artist explores issues around spirituality, commemoration and African knowledge systems. She processes her dreams as a medium through a lens of the plurality of existence across space and time, asking questions about the remembrance of ancestry. Part of her work has examined the processes of mythmaking which are used to construct history, calling attention to the absence of the Black female body in both the narratives and physical spaces of historical commemoration.
Nontsikelelo Mutiti
Nontsikelelo Mutiti is a Zimbabwean-born visual artist and educator. She is invested in elevating the work and practices of Black peoples past, present, and future through a conceptual approach to design, publishing, archiving practices, and institution building. Mutiti holds a diploma in multimedia from the Zimbabwe Institute of Vigital Arts (ZIVA) and an MFA from the Yale School of Art, with a concentration in graphic design.
Jabu Nadia Newman
Jabu Nadia Newman is an award-winning artist and filmmaker who works through the mediums of photography and videography. Using an agenda of pushing intersectional feminism her work is largely based on the different and complex identities of South African women. Newman independently wrote and directed South Africa’s newest and critically acclaimed feminist web series The Foxy Five. In 2020 Newman was commissioned by NOWNESS, British Film Institute and the British Council to write and direct a short film exploring diaspora aesthetics and issues of afro-futurism, The Dream That Refused Me (2021) which won two awards at the Ciclope Africa Awards Festival 2021 as well as a Silver Cannes Young Director Award. Her newest short film Inside Out premiered at the Encounters South African International Documentary Festival 2021. Most recently Newman won Bronze for the Shots EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) 2021 New Director of the Year Award.
Rara Zulu
Rara Zulu is a South African born, Melbourne based vocalist and musician with a wholesome rawness and a unique tendency to pull you into a state of vulnerability through her music. Her sound is heavily influenced by Soul, R’n’B and Hip Hop; made apparent in the rhythm and depth in her voice. Rara has performed in numerous venues across Sydney and Melbourne, including Footscray Community Art Centre’s HEAR Footscray, and has musically collaborated and supported national and international artists such as Ijale, Horatio Luna, Elle Shimada and Sibusile Xaba.
Artist Credits
blk banaana
Kirsty Marillier
Tariro Mavondo
Sethembile Msezane
Nontiskelelo Mutiti
Jabu Nadia Newman
Rara Zulu
And she was wearing trousers has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory, the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria, and the City of Melbourne through Arts House.
Online Events
Artist Talk 1: Call and Response: Dialogues and making across continents
Saturday 16 July, 5.30pm AEST – 90 minutes
Roberta Joy Rich in conversation with artists Jabu Nadia Newman, Rara Zulu, Kirsty Marillier and blk banaana
Artist Talk 2: When art meets the music: Reflections on Black archiving
Wednesday 20 July, 6pm AEST – 60 minutes
Samira Farah and Zara Julius in conversation
Artist Talk 3: Matriarchs and knowledge systems: past, present and future
Saturday 23 July, 5.30pm AEST – 60 minutes
Naomi Velaphi in conversation with artists Sethembile Msezane and Tariro Mavondo
Artist Talks will be Auslan Interpreted
Tickets
Artist Talks are FREE
Image Credit: Still from As high as the stars so far unseen by blk banaana.