Site Loader
Rock Street, San Francisco
  • Current Language:
  • fr
  • Select Language:

This is the rating and price for Zanele Muholi; South African 1972-; Musa Ngubane and Mabongi Ndlovu, Hillbrow, Johannesburg 2007, Being Series by Zanele Muholi


 Online
Zanele Muholi born in 1972
About the lot N° 154
Zanele Muholi; South African 1972-; Musa Ngubane and Mabongi Ndlovu, Hillbrow, Johannesburg 2007, Being Series
Medium: lambda print on a Dibond mount
Size : image size: 75 by 76,5cm 89,5 by 89,5 by 4,5cm including frame
Edition:
Signature:
Estimate (low-high) : 300000 ZAR-500000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Strauss & Co, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!
,Sale location : Cape Town, Western Cape, ZA
Sale Title : Perspectives on Africa - Session One It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 17 Feb 2025 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : EHNL2VDTZF Online sale

Provenance : The Gary Eisenberg Collection.
Exhibited : Stevenson, Johannesburg, Being, 4 June to 7 July 2007, another example from the edition exhibited.
Literature :
Notes : "Being is an exploration of both our existence and our resistance as lesbians/women loving women, as black women living our intersecting identities in a country that claims equality for all within the LGBTI community, and beyond."1 Zanele Muholi gained prominence in the mid-2000s with photographs that documented and affirmed the lives of Black lesbians in South Africa. As a member of the Forum for the Empowerment of Women, a support organisation for Black lesbians, Muholi highlighted the injustices faced by this community. Their growing body of work rejected photographic clichés and binaries often associated with Black women, instead focusing on intimate and loving representations of their community. Starting in 2003, Muholi made portraits of lesbian couples in Gauteng. Often made indoors and on beds, the improvised quality of these early portraits yielded to a more formal approach in which subjects posed outdoors. This portrait blurs these finer distinctions, and in turn reflects Muholi's dynamic approach to collaboration, as well as ethics. "I have never approached a stranger to come and be part of my photography," Muholi, then a Hillbrow resident, explained.2 1 Stevenson (n.d.) Zanele Muholi Being, online, https://archive.stevenson.info/exhibitions/muholi/being.htm, accessed 28 August 2024. 2 Sean O'Toole (2006) 'Zanele Muholi: Are You Feeling A Little Uncomfortable?' Business Day Art, March, page 12.
Condition_report :

Interested in valuating work by this artist ? 

AfricartMarket Insights

Access exclusive information.Sign-up here for our newsletter and we’ll keep you updated. You can unsubscribe at any time.

 

We respect your privacy. No spam.