Categories
Projects Women I've Shot

Women Who Create
This is Michaela Younge

Women Who Create is an ongoing portraiture project all shot in B&W in my studio in Woodstock, Cape Town. I love to connect with other creatives and see what motivates them and find out what is behind there work.

I’ve followed Michaela’s work for a while as I find it intriguing, another world but also our own. I met her for the first time when I invited her into my studio to participate in Women Who Create.

She brought with her soft clouds of colourful, loose merino wool (which we used in her portrait), one of her complex, beautiful and completed pieces and a dangerous looking felting needle.

Michaela Younge is a South African artist born in Cape Town in 1993. After high school, Michaela attended the Michaelis School of Fine Art, where her father lectured in the Sculpture department. She graduated in 2015 receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts with distinction. While at Michaelis, she primarily worked in the mediums of sculpture and print, however, after graduating she began working with wool, constructing felt tableaux depicting scenes of the everyday, the violent and the bizarre.

Her works are created by needle felting merino wool into textiles as well as found fabrics, such as old curtains and tapestries. The works are textural and are characterised by colourful, busy scenes that often play with perspective. Michaela is interested in the absurdity of everyday life, often finding humour in theatrical scenes of violence or through a comedy of errors. These scenes invite a closer look at human relationships and interactions – sometimes skewering the subjects in the process.

Below is a Proust-like interview with Michaela:

Why do you create?

Art-making is generally exciting, and expressive, and making money from something like that is rewarding, so I guess I create because I get pleasure from it.

What is/are your greatest extravagance/s?

“Decorasie” type objects, second-hand toys, ceramics, clothes.

Your greatest fear?

Alien abduction, going under anaesthetic but it doesn’t work and you’re just paralysed.

What defines your idea of happiness?

Watching BBC with my mom next to the heater is pretty good.

What do you think is overrated?

Pasta; everybody seems to love it, but let’s be honest it’s just long pieces of cooked flour and egg! I’m not saying it’s terrible, cause it can be good, I just think its overrated.

On what occasion do you lie?

If there was no benefit in telling the truth, and the truth was really a massive sack of awful.

Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

Using expletives, such as “fucking”, “bloody” and the word “wow”.

When and where are/where you happiest?

Having a drink on Bakoven Beach in the late afternoon on a hot summer’s day.

What is your most treasured possession?

My grandmother’s ring, gifted to me by my mother.

What is your most marked characteristic?

Apparently I give very good hugs, but that’s not useful in the time of Corona! A friend said that I get excited by things or going places some people wouldn’t, and I always have a story from it.

What do you do to help put you into your optimal creative space?

If the weather is bad, I have to have a hot water bottle as I find being cold very distracting, and a hot water bottle has the placebo effect of making my concentration better.

What does your (physical) creative space look like?

I work off a big desk, with a large lamp and I always have to have a pencil and some paper, especially if I’m talking on the phone as I get pre-emptively nervous that I may have to take notes at any point. Then there are two large boxes of colourful merino wool on the floor, and a lint roller.

What do you get huge satisfaction out of doing apart from your primary creative outlet?

I’ve been using pencil crayons and khoki pens and doing more drawings, and I’ve been experimenting with resin which is a hot mess but I love it.

When creating what is your biggest frustration?

Balancing admin, chores and creative work. I have to set aside time for emails as they give me a lot of stress!

When you’re in your ultimate creative space what word would you use to describe the experience?

“Quiet” or “quick”.

You can find Michaela’s Instagram profile here.

Categories
Projects Women I've Shot

Women Who Create
This is Olivié Keck

Women Who Create is an ongoing portraiture project all shot in B&W in my studio in Woodstock, Cape Town. I love to connect with other creatives, see what motivates them and find out what is behind their work.

I met Olivié in about 2015 in ceramics class at Frank Joubert art school in Cape Town. She was busy, at that time, working on the giant piece below: “Script Kitty”. It probably stands about 65 cm high. I nervously helped her carry the kitty into the kiln for its very last firing in 2016. It’s beautiful.

Olivié is a drawer, an illustrator and a ceramicist. She also does prints and creative collaborations. I love that she describes herself as a ‘mass romantic’.

From Olivié:

“I relish loud colours, juxtaposing ideas, jumbled associations and subverting expectations. There’s a ‘pleasure spiked with pain’ feeling about the work I make. This is a sensation I feel captures my experience of the world. Humans are never fully in one attitude; and I’d like to think my work echoes both the severity and the humor in this sentiment.”

Olivié Keck (b.1989) lives and works in Cape Town, South Africa. She received her BFA from The Michaelis School of Fine Art in 2011.

 “Keck’s work is a contemporary homage to the ‘commonplace’ narratives that her subjects portray. She relishes loud colours, graphic forms, juxtaposing ideas, parody and subverting expectations. The aesthetics of her work commemorates the theatre of human experience, whilst echoing her fascination with popular culture, intimacy and contemporary story-telling.”

Below is a Proust-like interview with Olivié:

Why do you create?

I create because I see in pictures what I can’t explain in words.

What is your motto? 

‘Sometimes you gotta risk it for a biscuit’ 

What is your most treasured possession?

I treasure all the things in my home that have been handmade or given to me by friends and loved ones. All the memories imbued in objects that surround me with the sensation of being connected to people. They are my little flagships of joy spotted all over my home.

My art collection is especially close to my heart. Some of the artworks that adorn my walls include pieces by Jean De Wet, Mia Chaplin, Danielle Clough, Andrew Sutherland and Cecil Skotnes. All of which I consider amazing artists and special humans.

My postcard collection. I love a gift shop keepsake and I have always loved keeping postcards from places I’ve visited, art museums with artworks I love or weird little nooks in the world I’ve discovered. I have a huge wall of postcards I’ve collected or have been sent by friends on their travels. It’s a bit of a cliché I guess, but it’s my personal 2D museum.

A quilt made by my mother, which is very special to me and has all the nurturing and wholesome characteristics I associate with her.

When you’re in your ultimate creative space what word would you use to describe the experience?

Compulsive.

What is your most marked characteristic?

I’m a bit of a hoarder especially when it comes to art materials. I think it’s a compulsion that is both my best and my worst trait.

Sometimes I’m happy that I hold on to things and try to find a use for them or try to use every last bit, but it means I always have bits and pieces of stuff everywhere which can get overwhelming. I also hate wasting stuff, so I think that’s why I keep every last drop, which makes me every bit as frustrating to live with as you are imagining.

What do you get huge satisfaction out of doing apart from your primary creative outlet?

Weirdly I find cleaning quite therapeutic. I know most people hate it, but I find it to be an act of renewal. Like getting to start over – a reset button. There is something deeply cathartic in getting out the vacuum and sucking up all the dusky residue of yesterday’s ‘you’.  Sometimes if I’m feeling stuck on a creative problem I’ll get out a cloth, wipe down a surface or a floor just to unlock that dopamine of accomplishment.

I really enjoy gardening and planting vegetables. Nature is an inspiration and because I grew up in a farm-like setting, working in the garden always takes me back to being a kid planting things with my mother.

Puzzle making is another satisfying activity that feels trivial but fills me with moment-to moment thrills. It is a great activity to do alone or with a friend. During the quarantine of Covid-19 it has really taken a hold of me. I can spend hours and hours on it. Looking through this list it seems like I’m getting ready for retirement, just need to get into bingo and I’m made!

Do you have pet peeves?

My industry pet peeve, if I’m being REALLY candid, maybe too candid, I find it frustrating how some people, not all, but some, automatically expect discounts when purchasing artwork. It’s a major bug bear for me.

I know it’s not just me, it happens frequently to artists all over. It seems to be an accepted industry standard in the art arena. Like there’s some golden rule stating that artists’ always overvalue their work by at least 10% and therefore one should never pay the asking price. Purchasing an artwork with a conditional discount is like giving someone a compliment and an insult at the same time.

It’s different if it’s a frequent buyer, someone that has supported your career time and again, if the person has earnt that privilege, but when a fresh kid on the block wants to haggle – that’s straight up shameless.

Personally, I think it undermines any artist’s self-worth and the role of the artist as a legitimate profession in society. It’s a trope that rewards misers and I wish people wouldn’t do it. There I said it out loud. If you didn’t know, now you know.

What is/are your greatest extravagance/s?

Hands-down this title goes to my two Italian greyhounds, Wendy Horsecraft and Avon Barksdale. They are ridiculous creatures, I’m not even sure they are dogs…sometimes I think they might be proof aliens exist. But damn I love them and lavish them unashamedly.

Your greatest fear?

Being homeless and destitute. I have a distinct memory of this fear manifesting as a young kid when my dad past away. I felt for the first time that I could lose someone or some huge facet of my life overnight. I remember this feeling being really intense for years, I would have nightmares about it all the time. Horrible situations of destitution. I have this sensation less as an adult but every now and then I still have waves of this deep-seated anxiety come up for me in conscious and subconscious states.

What do you think is overrated?

Celebrity Culture. Our society is so obsessed with celebrities or becoming a celebrity. A country like America is probably the best example of how this phenomenon, this obsession, has wreaked their society and warped their value system.

Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

I say the word ‘crazy’ and ‘wild’ a lot as emphatic words. I annoy myself with it, because it feels like I don’t use enough adjectives in my speech. It’s my fall-back exclamation phrase, but it’s become such a habit. It’s my verbal crutch.

What does your (physical) creative space look like?

My studio has a bit of a split personality. I have different areas for different moods. I have a desk on both sides of the room and a large window that looks out over the mountain and the lagoon  next to my house. I feel very lucky to have such a tranquil and light space to work in.

The walls of my studio are filled with sketches and scribbled ideas or spark notes on paper and inspirational references. I have some of my work that I’ve kept up on walls to keep me company. There are pockets of colour and pattern everywhere and a picture rail that I curate with work I am busy making or have made.

My dogs are always in my studio while I work. They love lying on my couch in the sun that comes in through the windows and in winter the heater keeps us all warm.

What defines your idea of happiness?

I think I am living my idea of happiness right now. I work hard, but I am free to make the things I want to and keep my own hours. I’ve arrived at a really special time in my life where I have the support of an amazingly talented network of friends and loved ones that help me navigate my creative and emotional challenges. I feel at peace with my process and the kind of artist I think I am. I feel lucky every day I get to be an artist. I think it’s important not to see happiness as a place you’ll arrive at one day, happiness is more what you make of it and I try to enjoy the moment to moment as much as possible.

Keck’s solo exhibitions included; ‘False Priest’ (2014) at Commune1, ‘Selfie Fulfilling Prophecy’ (2016) at David Krut Projects, ‘The Lure’ (2018) at Chandler House ,‘Drop Dead Gorgeous’ (2019) at CIRCA/Everard Read and ‘In Bloom’(2020) with 131A Gallery. Keck has attended two international art residences; The Kala Art Institute (2016 Berkeley/USA) and The Frans Masereel Centrum (2017 Antwerp/Belgium). She has exhibited internationally with No Man’s Art Gallery in Tehran and The Kala Art Institute in Berkeley/USA. Her work has been featured numerous times at art fairs such as CTAF, JAF and Turbine Art Fair.

Find her Instagram profile here.

Categories
Projects Women Related Happenings

PROJECT
DARE Womens Foundation,Tanzania: Reusable Sanitary Pads

In June 2019 I had an opportunity to make a visit to the DARE Womens Foundation based in Arusha, Tanzania.
After photographing with the ladies I spent a time learning about the reusable sanitary towels they are also making at other workshops. This post is dedicated to this part of the NGO’s work.

Above and below you can see two different patents for the pads which are partly made from highly absorbent off-cut fabrics (an up cycling initiative) imported by another NGO to Tanzania for this use.

Their website includes patterns for machine and hand sewing the pads as well as templates for cutting the patterns.

They were still working on design and patent; there were a few different versions available for me to see. Below is one ‘pack’ that was available and which was made up of 7 washable and exchangeable cotton/microfibre cloths which slip into the main ‘holder’ (top left) which is then clipped to underwear. They include a diagrammatical info sheet for their user which included cleaning and discreet drying advice as well as soap bars in each sanitary pack.

Ive taken this directly from the DARE website:

PROBLEM
Many Tanzanian women, especially in rural areas, do not have access to feminine hygiene products because stores are far away and it is expensive to afford them each month. They use old cloth and cornhusks instead, which can cause fungal infections and embarrassing leaks and odors. This creates a barrier to their work and education because many girls skip school and work during menstruation.

SOLUTION
The Dare Women’s Foundation is training women to make reusable pads. A core group of women will start their own small businesses making and selling pads. Reusable pads are cheaper than disposable pads, last up to a year, are environmentally friendly, and eliminate the need to go to a store each month. See  our sewing pattern and instruction manual to learn how to make your own reusable pads!

I was so impressed that this initiative also encouraged women to make their own, both with instructions for machine making and hand stitching, making this important product another step forward in accessibility.

From their About Us page:

The Dare Women’s Foundation is an NGO working to empower Tanzanian women and girls, with a focus on rural areas, through poverty alleviation, social justice, economic empowerment, and gender equality.

Many of the women we work with have endured tragedies such as rape, discrimination, domestic violence. Most all of them deal with lack of feminine hygiene care, little nutrition and conservation education, young marriage, and large family size due to lack of contraception and sex education.

​By bringing these women together, educating them about their rights, giving them a voice, and supporting them in their endeavors, the Dare Women’s Foundation is changing Tanzania one woman at a time. When you educate a girl, you educate a community.

Below: Each set of pads, soap & instructions etc. comes in its own handmade textile bag for discretion.

The below comes from the website as well.

Categories
Interviews & Conversations Projects

PROJECT
Sri Lankan Lace Makers

During my time in Sri Lanka I approached a small cooperative: a woman-led lace-making enterprise founded by Leila in Weligama, at the south of the island.
I wanted to document what I knew was considered a waning art and see who was still creating the intricate handcraft, where and how.

I asked my make-shift translator to both ask the three women present and to help explain to me why lace was disappearing from the island. He spoke for a long time lime about the 2004 tsunami and told me how it had wiped out far more women than it had men. He explained how the swathes of fabric, Indian sari-style, encased the body making it hard to swim for the few who knew how to. Men, on the other hand, many being good swimmers and fishermen at the coast had faired better.
With many of the older, knowledge bearing, women, gone the already fragile cottage industry of Beeralu lace making had almost been entirely lost.

Lace making, which is over 600 years old in Sri Lanka, is considered an important part of local heritage on the island even though it has Dutch and Portuguese origins. traditionally, housewives have made the lace as a side income. Their husbands are out fishing and between cooking, cleaning and child minding these women work on a complex and intricate craft. It is a craft passed down from women to their female family members and friends.

Leila, the lace shop owner, has a weathered face. Our translator pointed at her vast array of awards while she stood by silently but persistently pushing the lace in my direction. She was proud and also a dogged sales lady. Not many tourists look for lace anymore. Sales are needed badly in order to support their meagre side incomes through hard and long labour at the loom.

We walk out of her little shop and sit with the other lace-making ladies working in the light breeze which comes off the ocean across the road. The intricate lace design is drawn onto graph paper and then attached to the kotta boley (a paper wrapped cylindrical chunk of coconut husk) with pins which mark out the full pattern. Hundreds of silver topped pin heads create a maze soon to be spun and knotted into a detailed textile. The weaver guides the fine cord or thread around each pin manually, using an often hand carved spindle made from local wood.

The use of the little bobbins is part of what gives the lace its name; in Sinhalese it is referred to as beeralu rende. The word beeralu is derived from the Portuguese word ‘bilro,’ (meaning bobbin), while ‘renda’ is Portuguese for lace.

Ranjeny, Leila and Marleny sit watching myself and the translator chat about the 2004 Tsunami. The ladies look down occasionally at what they’re doing but mostly they work from muscle memory, their hands speeding across the surfaces of the bobbins as they grab and push and twist the threads into form.

Leila has been making lace since she was 10 years old. She teaches her two daughters to make lace and will most likely start teaching her grandchildren soon. The 3m long piece she has been working on has taken her one month. She’ll sell the length of lace for about $30.00 once she has finished it she says.

I asked her how many bobbins she had worked with at any one time. “I work with up to 50 bobbins sometimes. I’ll use them to make one single piece of lace work”. “But how does she possibly remember what she’s doing?” I ask. “I watch the marks on the paper”, she says simply, her bobbins click as they fall. Her hands are a blur but she still looks up at me.

Young people don’t like to do it anymore,” Lucky, my translator, tells me. “Some do it if they are without work or maybe have a little free time at home, but they have other things they want to do now. After the tsunami not many people make lace anymore; the old people moved away, they moved inland. A lot of people became scared of the ocean”.