Primêre Wentelbaan is an expansion of Adams’s body of work exploring ‘desire lines’ – pathways of unofficial routes gradually worn over time by repeated pedestrian travel. Throughout the Apartheid era such pathways were used to connect segregated communities that were forcibly separated by man-made boundaries, highways and open ground, physically and economically excluding communities of colour. To Adams these ‘desire lines’ represent more than journeys borne of necessity or convenience, but freedom and transgression against deeply enforced and oppressive structures. Working with satellite imagery to create drawings that trace these pathways, Adams invites us to witness them from above, making visible collective histories of resistance, desire and struggle, and transforming them into sites of agency.
Growing up in this acutely challenging environment, against which Adams held a multifaceted racial, religious and sexual identity, the desire lines have a very personal resonance for him: “I have often wondered about the first person who decided to take a shortcut, paving the way for others to follow. I feel a kinship with them, having grown up in an environment where there were no artists, no one to create a path for me.”