Community Mural Project
Niamh Walsh-Vorster
Photography, especially in the digital age, has often been regarded as a second-class citizen in the art world. The assumption is that it is quick, lacks thought and process, and is completed with a single click. This mural project challenges that notion. The impact of the images—each crafted with the professional vision, distinct style, and aesthetic of the individual photographers—reveals a final collection of community faces created with artistic intent and curatorial framing. Large and looming, the faces confront passersby with a myriad of gazes. The goal was to create 100 portraits, but we ended up making 200. The final wall includes 400 images, layering individual identities into a broader collective presence. It presents both a challenge and an invitation, depending on how one perceives it, asking viewers to consider what a community looks like in its connections and flux. The portraits showcase people with diverse backgrounds and experiences: supporters of #FreePalestine, those who "kind of understand Elon Musk," familiar local figures like Thami Shandu, the Inanda tour guide, and KZNSA staff members Leo Janga and Barista Pieta Mpanza. There are new friendships and young love, expectant mothers, an Irish man from Belfast who moved to England during The Troubles, a family celebrating five months of their first child’s life, a hitchhiker from South America, and international artists from Syria, Colombia, and Germany. Among them are newly naturalized U.S.-born South African citizens, Jomba! festival performers, curators, a teenager with a crush, and people who have lost much yet continue to smile. Over two days, with the voluntary help of six photographers: Paige Furness, Niamh Walsh-Vorster, Paulo Menezes, Gift Banda and Gabriela Valdespino, the project came to life. The project was an initiative by the KZNSA Exhibition Sub-Committee in partnership with ArtsResearchLab and Contemporary Archive Project. Street artists: Ewok and Kev7 Special thanks to KZNSA staff including Njabulo Nyawo for painting the wall white in preparation for pasting. Exhibition sub-committee: Thobi Shange, Rachel Baasch and Rohini Amratlal ArtBank Interns: Siddiqa Ballim (ArtsResearchLab) and Jerry Beaver (Contemporary Archive Project).
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