11 October - 20 December 2023
Igshaan Adams
Primêre Wentelbaan
Thomas Dane Gallery
3 Duke Street, St James’s, London SW1
For the exhibition at Thomas Dane Gallery, Adams presents three large-scale tapestries and hanging ‘cloud’ sculptures, conceived as an interconnected installation across the gallery walls and floor. The work reflects on the psycho-geographical environment, geopolitical context and sites of memory of his childhood in Bonteheuwel, a working-class segregated township on the Cape Flats southeast of Cape Town, founded as a so-called Coloured district in the 1957 Group Areas Act. Made using quotidian materials such as beads, rope, wire, glass and shells, these intensely intricate works elevate the material aspects of lived spaces and illuminate the personal and political histories and stories that they hold. The title ‘Primêre Wentelbaan’ [Primary Orbit] alludes to the sites into which Adams first ventured as a child and adolescent, and serves as a way for Adams to think about how his early environment shaped his world-view.
The works in Primêre Wentelbaan look at three adjoining locations across Bonteheuwel where Adams lived, and the neighbouring Heideveld where his aunts lived. The townships are separated by the N2 Highway (previously known as Settlers Way) and Adams traversed these sites in his immediate environment with his brother and friends as he grew from childhood to adolescence and his sense of self was formed. The wall-hung tapestry, Aan die anderkant van die blou veld hoor ek haar lag [on the other side of the blue field I hear her laugh] (2023), and the floor work, Kyk tweekeer vir die karre voor julle kruis! [check twice for the cars before you cross!] (2023), are connected by absences: pathways that cross the works and chart the movement of people between them. Alongside these works, a confronting, dark diptych, hanging almost floor to ceiling, shimmers like an enveloping night sky: Sterverligte paadjie huis toe [starlit path home] (2023) draws from an open, liminal space surrounded by highways in Heideveld.
Adams’s pieces are densely worked with many layers of mediation from the initial satellite views and drawings, reworking the cartoons through digital manipulation, weaving, binding, dying, making and unmaking, introducing material collage and a bold colour way – a departure from the muted earth tones with which we are more familiar. Here the palette is brighter and more exaggerated: saturated shades of pink, turquoise and cadmium red, contrasting with inky blackness evoke a sense of child-like wonder and a nostalgia which Adams considers “a yearning for the beauty and fantasy of what could have been if my environment had allowed for it – forcing a wish onto a memory.”
Adams participated in the 59th International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale, 2022, curated by Cecilia Alemani, and recently as part of the Islamic Arts Biennale 2023 in Jeddah. Major solo exhibitions of Adams’s work have been held at The Art Institute of Chicago (2022); Kunsthalle Zürich (2022); Hayward Gallery, London (2021); SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah, GA (2020); Akershus Kunstsenter, Oslo (2019); and The Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town (2018). His work is included in the public collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Guggenheim Abu Dhabi; The Art Institute of Chicago; Baltimore Museum of Art; Inhotim Museum, Brazil; Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town; Minneapolis Institute of Art; Standard Bank collection, Johannesburg; and the University of Cape Town.
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