Colbert Mashile: Experience and the Scar
2 - 28 October
This exhibition provides a retrospective view of Colbert Mashile’s work on paper, between 2004 and 2009.
Colbert Mashile has been heralded as a contemporary African surrealist of sorts. His imagery has developed over the years into a sophisticated language of symbols and characters that are, although often almost recognisable, drawn completely from journeys into deep imagination. Mashile declines to offer any direct interpretation of his own work, and so viewers are left to cast around for visual affinities in order to decipher his artistic code.
When the stream of attention from writers and critics began around 2000, Mashile was almost completely pre-occupied with his own responses to the experience of the male circumcision ritual undergone by boys from the Mapulana clan of the Northern Sotho tribe before they reach their teens. Mashile attributes much of the imagery in his early work to his attempt to confront the horror and trauma of this event. The time Mashile spent living in Johannesburg had similar dark effects on his work. However, once re-located to Bushbuckridge, a rural setting in which he was able to experience his home landscape in a more direct way and live with a greater sense of peace, his work began to take on different and lighter forms.
Looking at work selected from over the years exposes interesting shifts in the artist’s modus operandi: from the ‘psychological images of phallic towers, cowrie shells, zoomorphic and anthropomorphic forms, huddled crowds, whispers and an ominous secrecy’ cited by Kate McCrickard in Mashile’s early work, to a shift toward figuration and subtle development in colour palette in more recent years.

















