Otobong Nkanga : to dig a hole that collapses again
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Nkanga is fascinated with what she has referred to as “glimmer” and “shine,” the surface qualities of natural resources such as mica, a mineral that is used in makeup and turned into an object of seduction. This interest has led the artist far and wide, studying the intense mining of the world’s natural resources since the rise of late capitalism. One of the primary means by which the artist’s interest manifests is through the body. In Nkanga’s works on paper and her tapestries, the body becomes a border implicated within the field of mining.
Nkanga acts as a cultural anthropologist—tracing the violent means by which contested minerals and objects are exhumed from their natural environments, such as Nigeria and Namibia—and considers how they are transported to the West. Through her work, the artist re-imagines our relationship to our everyday environment.
Otobong Nkanga’s first ever US survey exhibition, To Dig a Hole That Collapses Again, takes its name from the “Green Hill” in Namibia. The name is a direct translation of the town that houses it, Tsumeb, one of Namibia's "rare gems."
TitelOtobong Nkanga : to dig a hole that collapses again
Auteur
Plaats van uitgaveNew York
UitgeverPrestel
Jaar van uitgave2018
Pagina's138 p.
Illustratiesill.
Formaat26 cm
Materiaalboek
ISBN978-3-7913-5800-0
Onderwerpdrawings, minerals, poetry, performance art, colonialism
Persoonstrefwoord Otobong Nkanga, resident rabk
| Exemplaarnummer | Plaatscode | Uitleenstatus | |
|---|---|---|---|
| B-2018/354 | ,73,NKANGA,2 | Beschikbaar |
| Exemplaarnummer | B-2018/354 |
| Plaatscode | |
| Uitleenstatus | Beschikbaar |