PRESENTATION: Lungiswa Gqunta-Tending to the Harvest of Dreams

Lungiswa Gqunta, Nompumelelo; Kholiswa (Detail), 2021, photo: Axel Schneider, © Lungiswa Gqunta, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)Through her work Lungiswa Gqunta grapples with the complexities of the South African post-colonial cultural and political landscape. Focusing on creating multisensory experiences that attempt to articulate the social imbalances that persist as a legacy of both patriarchal dominance and colonialism, Gqunta exposes different forms of violence and the systemic inequality in South Africa.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: MMK Archive

In her solo exhibition “Tending to the harvest of dreams”, the South African artist Lungiswa Gqunta poses the question of colonialism’s continued impact thirty years after the supposed end of apartheid. How can one pick up the thread of one’s own relationship to nature, the centuries-old traditions and knowledge that lie within one but speak to one only in dreams? How can one find and carry on one’s identity, of which one was robbed bit  by bit, also through land seizure? Slowly and subtly, like the scent and effect of imphepho*, the violence that comes forth from this work only on closer inspection seeps into us and stays there. The barbed wire restricts our movements and gives us a sense of what it’s like to be in a place where you could feel lighthearted if you had the right to. After centuries of colonial influence and violence, it is difficult to change these places. Two-thirds of the country are still in white ownership. Ninety percent of the wealth belongs to 10 percent of the population. In a country so rich in natural resources, the question of land is crucial and the demands for restitution ubiquitous. The history of barbed wire began with the colonial conquest of the North American West, the prairie, and the systematic expulsion of the indigenous peoples (by way of the Homestead Act). It was during the Second Boer War that it first came into use for military purposes. The British stretched it between rapidly erected blockhouses to protect strategic points such as railway tracks and severely limit the Boers in their freedom of movement. Barbed wire also surrounded the concentration camps subsequently built for the imprisoned population. Under apartheid, it helped enforce  segregation. And today it is still as typical of the South African landscape as the countless colonial gardens and parks that dot the entire country: Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, Company’s Garden, Brenthurst Gardens, to name just a few. Despite its tremendously rich flora—South Africa has the greatest number of endemic plant species in the world—the Dutch and British introduced “native” plants and formed the conquered landscape according to their own tastes. To this day, the gardens and parks are planted and cultivated primarily by Black South Africans who were prohibited from visiting them under apartheid. “They lavish their care and love on these gardens even though both are denied them in these land-scapes of oppression and exploitation,” the artist observes. Hedges, walls, fences, and wires also enclose the gardens, parks, and entire landscapes of the present. “Parks are one of the many places in which you can see this segregation structurally, and it also exists in terms of gardens and natural spaces of leisure. It may seem crazy, but this green grass really becomes a physical manifestation of how people are treated and how an area is treated because of the people who live in it,” says Lungiswa Gqunta.

* Impepho is an indigenous African plant that, once dried, is burnt in order to communicate with one’s ancestors. Impepho is well-known to the majority of Sub Saharan Africans as it is used to communicate with their ancestors and it is also used by traditional healers to communicate with the deceased.

Photo: Lungiswa Gqunta, Nompumelelo; Kholiswa (Detail), 2021, photo: Axel Schneider, © Lungiswa Gqunta, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)

Info: MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst), Domstraße 10, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, Duration: 21/8-14/11/2021, Days & Hours: Daily 11:00-18:00, www.mmk.art

Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)
Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)

 

 

Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)
Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)

 

 

Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)
Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)

 

 

Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)
Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)

 

 

Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)
Lungiswa Gqunta, Tending to the harvest of dreams, 2021, installation view ZOLLAMT MMK, photo: Diana Pfammatter, Courtesy the artist and MMK (Museum Für Moderne Kunst)