CAPE TOWN.- Following Invocations #1, a three-day gathering held at
Zeitz MOCAA in March 2022, the museum announced the opening of the international research and multi chapter exhibition titled Indigo Waves and Other Stories: Re-Navigating the Afrasian Sea and Notions of Diaspora.
For the first time, Zeitz MOCAA brings together artists from across the African and Asian continents and their respective diasporas in one exhibition. We are extremely grateful to our sponsors and partners for the opportunity to present this project, says Thato Mogotsi, Assistant Curator at Zeitz MOCAA.
Presented by Zeitz MOCAA in partnership, Indigo Waves and Other Stories is guest curated by the renowned art historians and curators Natasha Ginwala and Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, with Michelangelo Corsaro, and in partnership with Gropius Bau and SAVVY Contemporary in Berlin, and Vasl Artists Association, Karachi, amongst others. Taking the stories and histories of the Indian Ocean as its departure point, the project, including the exhibition, brings together contemporary artists, ilmmakers, musicians, writers and thinkers to investigate, unpack and shed light on some of the smaller and bigger historical, cultural and linguistic links between the continents of Africa and Asia. The exhibition approaches the Indian Ocean as a communal horizon from which to read Afrasian (that is, belonging to both Africa and Asia) histories of forced and unforced movement through currents of mercantile and colonial empire.
Ziwa Kuu, the Swahili Sea, the Afrasian Sea, the Indian Ocean, Ratnakara, Eastern Ocean, Indic Ocean or Bahari Hindi are just a few of the names used to characterise a body of water that has been dubbed the oldest continuum in human history. This water mass covers some 20% of the worlds total oceanic area and spreads between the East African coast, bordering Asia in the north, engulfing Australia in the east and stretching south to the Southern Ocean. There is much in a name, they say, but no single name seems to have the potential of encompassing, containing, signifying or expressing all that this body of water stands for, tells, sings or invokes. It is too complex, too deep, too vast and pregnant with a plenitude of histories, to carry just one name. What is for certain is that rather than divide, it connects geographies, cultures, peoples, languages, foods, sounds, winds, waters, economies, philosophies and more. The ocean is a fluid joint, a junction of and for affinities and realignments prior to nation-state allegiances.
Soh Bejeng Ndikung and Ginwala state: What does oceanic re-memory look like? How does one correspond with and commemorate this terrain that is equally one of connection as it is of indenture and trauma? As we transmit the complex knowledge that is harboured within many of us as water beings, Indigo Waves and Other Stories seeks to set up reciprocal motions that unsettle established geopolitical assessments and the dominance in academia around the North Atlantic. It is our intention with this project to attend to open tides of acculturation, Afrasian imaginaries, an atmosphere of multiple tongues and the monsoon cycles of the Indian Ocean system.
A highlight for Zeitz MOCAA, Indigo Waves and Other Stories, includes ambitious new commissions from South African multidisciplinary artist Thania Petersen; visual artist Ayesha Hameed; the Réunionnais sculptor Hasawa; Franco-Comorian Myriam Omar Awadi and Mauritian artist Shiraz Bayjoos site-specific installation, made in collaboration with local historian and storyteller Traci Kwaai.
Other participating artists include Nigerian-English photographer Akinbode Akinbiyi; Malala Andrialavidrazana, a visual artist born in Madagascar; Indian photographer Sohrab Hura; Taiwanese artist-researcher and photographer Cetus Chin-Yun Kuo; Colombian painter Oscar Murillo; South African artist, curator, filmmaker and researcher Luvuyo Equiano Nyawose; South African painter Cinga Samson; and artist and researcher Sancintya Mohini Simpson with Isha Ram Das.
This exhibition exemplifies the work we are committed to at Zeitz MOCAA to uncover and highlight new and forgotten histories, and forge new oceanic pathways of connection and affiliation, says Koyo Kouoh, Zeitz MOCAA Executive Director and Chief Curator. It is only through the contributions of poets, artists, filmmakers and storytellers that we can reimagine ourselves in ways not dictated by dominant histories. We are showing that our voices and narratives carry the beauty of our entanglements and relationships over centuries, and now is the time that it takes centre stage.