Ambitious and talented Alex artists urged to enter Standard Bank Young Artist Award

ALEX – Standard Bank Gallery manager Dr Same Mdluli said the award is open to all artists with an impressive portfolio.

Standard Bank Gallery manager Dr Same Mdluli has encouraged ambitious and talented Alex artists to enter their works of art in the Standard Bank Young Artist Award.

Speaking at the opening of the virtual solo exhibition of Blessing Ngobeni at the gallery titled Chaotic Pleasure, Mdluli said the award was open to all artists with an impressive portfolio of works and who harbour dreams of success.

Turning to her introductory text for Ngobeni’s exhibition, Mdluli said Chaotic Pleasure is a body of work that solidly positions Ngobeni within his own praxis of working with multiple and complex ideas.

“It is a bold testament and confident display of a sense of ownership of his artistic language. As the winner of the Standard Bank Young Artist Award for visual art for the year 2020, this work will remain a marker of an important moment in his career and artistic practice.”

Ngobeni described his multimedia exhibition as serving as both an ‘observation and a form of confronting complex issues of power and abuse in post-colonial Africa’.

Ngobeni’s paradoxical title of the exhibition represents a quintessential feature of his artistic work and his ability to harness and manipulate seemingly incongruous words in order to intrigue, challenge, and inspire the viewer.

“The works in this exhibition are made in response to everything we are seeing in Africa today,” explains Ngobeni.

“The chaotic pleasure I talk about is the excitement and hope for a better future, and it’s the protests and the riots that take place when those elected into power fail to deliver.

“It’s the result of labouring and producing African resources, but never being able to enjoy those resources ourselves. It’s the beauty of the African landscape and the lingering effects of colonisation. When the coloniser walked into Africa, he did not think about the people living here, he got too excited and simply took over without concern for those people. It’s the pleasure of that excitement and the subsequent chaos it caused, and still causes today.”

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