MARY SIBANDE: dressed to tell South Africa’s tale
Mary Sibande is one of South Africa’s most talented young artists. For several years, her work has nearly exclusively revolved around Sophie, a servant character created from her personal genealogy (her mother, grandmother and great-grandmother were maids). Sophie’s dark silky skin and her majestic eye-catching blue Victorian dresses turn her into a queen whose eyes … Continue reading →
Filed under contemporary art, culture, exhibitions, fashion · Tagged with AAW, and Prosperity, apartheid, Art at Work, artist interview, artist residency, arts, black women, Caught in the rapture, FIFA 2010, Her Majesty Queen Sophie, I decline. I refuse to recline, I'm a lady, Joburg Art City, Johannesburg, limited movement, Lovers in Tango, Mary Sibande, Momo Gallery, post-colonialism, religion, sewing techniques, silent symphony, Soldiers of god, sophie, South Africa, textile, uniform, venice biennale, Victorian dress, vuka uzenzele, Yinka Shonibare, Zionist church