Blowing in the Wind

An exhibition about dreams and disasters will be held at KZNSA from 3 March.

BLOWING in the Wind, an exhibition about dreams and disasters, will open at KZNSA on Tuesday, 3 March at 5pm.

Blowing in the Wind is a diverse collection curated by Carol Brown and the first of the KZNSA’s continuing 2014/15 Social Art Programme of exhibitions for 2015. The year has begun with a series of international tragedies, which remind us that intolerance, fanaticism and violence are pervading our world.

Very little has changed from the 1960s when there was a strong movement in cultural manifestations towards creating a more peaceful and tolerant society.

Two sets of lyrics from the 1960s say it all. These are ‘Blowin’ in the Wind’ by Bob Dylan and ‘Imagine’ by John Lennon. The curatorial intention of this exhibition is to revisit these lyrics in the light of a half century where scant progress has been made – we still make the same mistakes and dream the same dreams.

Several works in Blowing in the Wind deal with environmental and human exploitation issues, including those surrounding the cornerstone of our country’s material wealth – the mining industry. William Kentridge, Jeanette Unite, Mary Wafer, Mthobisi Maphumulo are some of the artists working in this context.

The prevalence of crime cannot be ignored, and an installation by Andrea Walters reminds us of the media hype and frenzy around the Oscar Pistorius case.

There is, throughout the exhibition, a reminder of how people flock together in various situations where a critical mass can sway events. Vuli Nyoni’s fragile banners, showing a murmuration of swallows and Icarus, have many layers of meaning which tie the exhibition together.

The exhibition shows both new work and historic work, with other artists including Bongani Khanyile, Wonder Mbambo, Fran Saunders, Derrick Nxumalo, Paul Botes, Siobhan O’Reagain, Lerato Shadi, Akiko Nakaji and the portfolio of ‘Images of Human Rights’.

The exhibition will be opened by artist, critic and Durban International Film Festival manager, Peter Machen, and many of the artists will be in attendance.

The exhibition runs until 22 March.

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