The last colour to fade
Drawing on personal recollections and collective history, The Last Colour to Fade offers a meditation on the sea as both a physical and psychological landscape. Memories of my childhood spent on Robben Island are interwoven with historical facts, with narratives borrowed from literature and film...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Dissertation |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Faculty of Humanities
2020
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31802 |
id |
ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-31802 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-318022020-10-06T05:11:45Z The last colour to fade Visagie, Morne Alexander, J Fine Art Drawing on personal recollections and collective history, The Last Colour to Fade offers a meditation on the sea as both a physical and psychological landscape. Memories of my childhood spent on Robben Island are interwoven with historical facts, with narratives borrowed from literature and film, and images from art and life. Shifting between first person and third, between my own reflections and those of others, I have found in the lives and works of Adriaan Van Zyl, Derek Jarman, Jean Genet, Virginia Woolf and others a shared affinity for water. The sea – changeable, inconstant – reveals itself to be evocative of not only promise and peril, but of sensuality, desire and eroticism. It offers as imperfect parallel the image of the swimming pool and its attendant changing room, evoking a history of the queer body in art and writing. The twelve discrete artworks collected under the title The Last Colour to Fade, are abstracted interpretations of these themes, where colour and materiality are primary. The works share a persistent seriality, with the recurring image of a pool, the motif of tiles, and repetition of form. Most tends towards fragility, towards a suggested impermanence, made from tissue paper, porcelain, or stained tarlatan cloth. The accompanying text is one of fragments and vignettes, which suggest rather than state my thematic concerns, pairing my own voice with those of others in quoted passages and poems. Both my exhibition and writing gesture to the liminal space between what is said and what is left unspoken. 2020-05-06T11:12:34Z 2020-05-06T11:12:34Z 2019 2020-05-06T01:39:37Z Master Thesis Masters MA https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31802 eng application/pdf Faculty of Humanities Michaelis School of Fine Art |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Dissertation |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Fine Art |
spellingShingle |
Fine Art Visagie, Morne The last colour to fade |
description |
Drawing on personal recollections and collective history, The Last Colour
to Fade offers a meditation on the sea as both a physical and psychological
landscape. Memories of my childhood spent on Robben Island are
interwoven with historical facts, with narratives borrowed from literature
and film, and images from art and life. Shifting between first person and
third, between my own reflections and those of others, I have found
in the lives and works of Adriaan Van Zyl, Derek Jarman, Jean Genet,
Virginia Woolf and others a shared affinity for water. The sea – changeable,
inconstant – reveals itself to be evocative of not only promise and peril, but
of sensuality, desire and eroticism. It offers as imperfect parallel the image
of the swimming pool and its attendant changing room, evoking a history
of the queer body in art and writing. The twelve discrete artworks collected
under the title The Last Colour to Fade, are abstracted interpretations of
these themes, where colour and materiality are primary. The works share
a persistent seriality, with the recurring image of a pool, the motif of tiles,
and repetition of form. Most tends towards fragility, towards a suggested
impermanence, made from tissue paper, porcelain, or stained tarlatan
cloth. The accompanying text is one of fragments and vignettes, which
suggest rather than state my thematic concerns, pairing my own voice with
those of others in quoted passages and poems. Both my exhibition and
writing gesture to the liminal space between what is said and what is left
unspoken. |
author2 |
Alexander, J |
author_facet |
Alexander, J Visagie, Morne |
author |
Visagie, Morne |
author_sort |
Visagie, Morne |
title |
The last colour to fade |
title_short |
The last colour to fade |
title_full |
The last colour to fade |
title_fullStr |
The last colour to fade |
title_full_unstemmed |
The last colour to fade |
title_sort |
last colour to fade |
publisher |
Faculty of Humanities |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31802 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT visagiemorne thelastcolourtofade AT visagiemorne lastcolourtofade |
_version_ |
1719350926884470784 |