Relaas… Rosamarie Marriott
PLUG; Fractal Young Artist Exhibition 2010

When?
11 November 2010 at 19:00 (opening)
to 12 December 2010
Where?
Oliewenhuis Art Museum in the Annex
More information
Support some of Bloemfontein’s finest young artists by visiting the exciting Fractal Young Artist Exhibition 2010, entitled Plug, in the Annex at Oliewenhuis Art Museum. The exhibition will be on view from Thursday, 11 November 2010.
This is the third year that the Fractal Committee is providing young, upcoming visual artists the opportunity to exhibit at Oliewenhuis Art Museum. A panel consisting of members of the Oliewenhuis Advisory Committee, the Fractal Committee and other visual art practitioners selected Stella Brink, Sandy Little and Adelheid von Maltitz to take part in the Young Artist Exhibition.
The aim of the project is to give young artists the opportunity of showcasing their artwork professionally in a well-established environment and to offer them the prospect of expanding their knowledge and experience in curating an exhibition.
The exhibition will be opened by Prof Jansen, Rector of the University of the Free State on 11 November 2010 at 19:00 and there will be live entertainment and music performances. The artists will conduct a walkabout of the exhibition on Friday, 12 November 2010 at 10:00; anyone wishing to attend can contact the Museum. Artworks will be for sale. The exhibition closes on 12 December 2010.
Please visit www.fractaloliewenhuis.co.za for supporting information on the participating artists and to share your views on the exhibition. Please contact Karen Marais at 051 447 9609 or karen.marais@nasmus.co.za for additional information.
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Ditaba Oliewenhuis

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Kobie Nel – Photographer
Kobie Nel (b.1984) studied a Graphic Design and Photography course at Planet Pixl School of Advertising from 2003-2004, in Bloemfontein where she grew up.
During her second year she won Silver at the Fujifilm Profoto Awards in the student portfolio category. She also won numerous awards at the Fujifilm Awards in the Documentary and Fine Art categories 2005/2006.
After studying at Pixl she worked as a photography lecturer at Planet Pixl School of Advertising and also as a freelance photographer for 56Street Advertising Studio and other various clients.
In 2007 she won the Fractal Exhibition with Nikki Swanepoel.
In 2008 she moved to Australia were she is currently studying a BA Photography degree in Mebourne at RMIT University. She is planning to return to South Africa to work on some pending projects still in the development stages.
Her work
Her work seems mundane at first glance, but after a few seconds the image itself disturbs the viewer in such a way and forces one to look deeper. For example in the photograph ‘Conversations’ where the child is staring at the sea and with closer inspection the water and sand forms a face staring back. Thus creating a dialogue between the viewer and image
None of her images are digitally altered. She works in both film and digital formats.
She is a colour photographer and finds it most interesting to document people and how they interact with their surroundings.
Young Artists Exhibition – Recall of collective odds

Support some of Bloemfontein’s finest young artists by visiting the exciting Fractal Young Artist Exhibition 2009, entitled recall of collective odds in the Reservoir at Oliewenhuis Art Museum. The exhibition will be on view from Friday, 30 October 2009.
Fractal, an adhoc committee of the Friends of Oliewenhuis is a voluntary association dedicated to supporting and enhancing the activities of Oliewenhuis Art Museum.
This is the third year that the Fractal Committee is providing young, upcoming visual artists the opportunity to exhibit at Oliewenhuis Art Museum. A panel consisting of members of the Advisory Committee, the Fractal Committee and other visual art practitioners selected Angela de Jesus, (merit-award winner at the Sasol New Signatures Competition 2009), Mari-Louise du Plessis, Dot Vermeulen en Marguerite Visser to take part in the young artists’ exhibition.
The aim of the project is to give young artists the opportunity of showcasing their artwork professionally in a well-established environment and to offer them knowledge and experience in curating an exhibition.
The exhibition opens on 29 October 2009 at 19:00 and Dot Vermeulen and Mari- Louise du Plessis will present an experimental music performance. The artists will conduct a walkabout of the exhibition on 30 October 2009 at 10:00; anyone wishing to attend can contact the Museum. Artworks will be for sale. The exhibition closes on 20 November 2009.
Please contact Kgosimang Mothibi at 051 4479609 or mothibi@nasmus.co.za for additional information.
Nikki Swanepoel
Nicolene Swanepoel hails from Bloemfontein in the Free State. She holds a cum laude Degree in Fine Arts from the Central University of Technology (for which she was awarded Best Student in 2006) and a Diploma in Fashion Design.
In 2007 she won the Fractal Young Artist Exhibition and was a finalist in the ABSA L’Atelier Competition. In 2001 she was a runner-up for Designer of the Year. The Bloemfontein Municipality has also commissioned her to produce work.
Swanepoel’s artistic endeavours include working as graphic designer, gallery manager and owner, freelance photographer and presenting workshops to young artists.
She has exhibited at various galleries in the Western Cape, Free State and Gauteng.
“My work deals the search for identity and also the loss of it because of a conditioned lifestyle that is rooted in all kinds of comfort zones. The media presents a conditioned lifestyle and the continued existence thereof, as to what success, love and happiness is. The artworks are a testimony thereof because it creates a feeling of bondage, and also its counterpart – the strife for freedom, because one often feels trapped in one’s daily routine and responsibilities. The work testifies against those who choose to be in unhappy relationships or circumstances just because it is comfortable. The work focuses not only on the artist’s own inner conflicts and the search for identity, but also on the society’s conditioned existence. Naked female figures are used to symbolize vulnerability and are not portrayed for the sake of erotica. The artworks are displayed as digital prints as well as photography on PVC material that adds to the issue of the media influencing our lives.”
Penny George
Penny George obtained a B-Tech Degree in Fine Art (Cum Laude) from the Free State’s University of Technology in 1999, and has completed her Postgraduate Certificate in Education at the same institution in 2007.
Her work experience has centred around art education, commencing with student, and then lecturer’s assistant at the Central University of Technology. From 1999 until February 2005 she was Educational Officer at Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein. During this tenure, she was involved in various activities, including the Address Redress Print Collection ’99. Penny is an active member of the Friends of Oliewenhuis Art Museum, and the chairperson of Fractal ad-hoc committee, which aims to nurture a love of art in the future generation.
She has participated in numerous group exhibitions and art competitions since 1995. Had her first solo exhibition entitled ‘DK’ in 2006 at the University of the Free State, Stegmann Art Gallery. In 2007 the ‘DK’ exhibition was hosted at the Gordart Art Gallery in Melville Johannesburg and will be hosting an exhibition at ART.B in Belville in April this year.
ARTISTS STATEMENT
Rituals of death occupy a fundamental and sacrosanct place in human society. Diverse in practise, death rites have several things in common: they evolve over time and within a communal context; they acknowledge mystery or superstition; and they proffer concrete ways to make a transition.
Penny George’s visual repertory, spanning nine years, reflects her initial fascination with the rituals of death and burial practices. Her early works, completed for her B-Teach Degree in Fine Art at the Central University of Technology, Free State, were inspired by her examination in the material culture and imagery of Basotho rites and ceremonies and how these are influenced by Western tradition. Metaphors obtained from the annals of Basotho folklore on the subject of specific rituals before; during and after death occupy a central theme in these early visual images.
Working primarily as a printmaker, George is concerned with the development of image materialisation. Her etchings, adeptly created using established tonal aquatints, fine point and engravings convey sensitivity and solidity to the subject matter.
Her initial preoccupation with the subject of death extends to images reflecting the cycle of life and death. Imagery of the fly, larvae and pupae become clearly inspirational forces, where the projected death of life – still in progress – results in ambiguously infused composites. In many instances, these works suggest decay; the subjects undergoing the physical changes that occur with death.
George’s versatility is reflected in the images produced in 2004, which incorporate discarded and banal found objects, loaded with intimations of decay and degeneration. Redundant items, each at a different stage of decay, become the protagonists of death. In these works, the hypothesis of the formerly valuable item comes into play, another metaphor for the status of death.
George’s current work reveals a growing range of techniques and materials and a further development of her earlier subject matter. By coalescing life and death, beauty and corrosion, organic and the inorganic, Penny George brings us face to face with the essence of humanity.
by Sharon Crampton
Bastersaad

Opening
Thursday
30 October 2008
19h00
The Reservoir
The exhibition will be opened by
Markus Steinman
Graphic Artist/Designer & Lecturer at Planet Pixl
RSVP before 24 October
(Please Click on Read More and leave a comment to RSVP)
Walkabout
Friday
31 October 2008
9h00
The Reservoir
Presented by the Fractal artists
“Bastersaad” – More about the Artists
The title of this year’s Fractal Young Artist Exhibition is BASTERSAAD, which refers to a hybrid seed produced by artificially cross-pollinated plants to improve the characteristics of the resulting plants. BASTERSAAD is an exhibition that exists out of artworks that focus on different themes, are made out of different media and created by artists from different backgrounds and training. The media used in the artworks include installation, painting, printmaking and photography. BASTERSAAD questions the boundaries of art disciplines and explores technological media together with “traditional” art media. It ventures between popular and high art, as well as art and design. The theme suggests a new breed of artist, where the fusion of popular culture and high art takes place. The resulting product, an exhibition compiled out of a mix of styles and media, cultivates a colourful, fresh and exciting new entity.
The featured artistis are Davina de Beer, Amelia Raath, P.W. Burger, Victor Geduld, Marjorie Human, Isak Janse van Rensburg and M.C. Roodt.
DAVINA DE BEER
(Geb. 14 Junie 1982)
Davina de Beer het haar Meestersgraad in Beeldende Kunste in 2008 by die Universiteit van die Vrystaat voltooi. Sy het verskeie kunswerkswinkels in 2006 en 2007 as deel van die Artists in Schools projek aangebied. Sy was ‘n studente-assistent by die Johannes Stegmann-kunsgalery van 2004 tot 2008, asook by Departement Kunsgeskiedenis en Visuele Kultuurstudie by die Universiteit van die Vrystaat. Hierdie jaar het sy aan verskeie uitstallings deelgeneem, onder andere by die Thompson Kunsgalery in Melville en die ABSA Atelier in Johannesburg. De Beer vertrek in Oktober 2008 na Sohar in Oman, waar sy kuns gaan aanbied by die Sohar International School.
The focus of De Beer’s research for the past four years has been the ruptures that occur in the continuity of family memories. Her artworks address aspects of memory preservation that deal with estrangement, anonymity, absence and mortality. She uses the interplay between exposure and concealment to examine the discontinuities in history and memory in the private and public spheres. Although she specialised in painting, she uses various media (family photographs, oil paint, light sensitive prints, digital prints and installation) to explore the discontinuities and different truths in memory. The paintings in the White Series focus on the aggression and estrangement of memory, and explore forgetting as an active element that transforms memories. Her smaller paintings pursue memory as frail and vulnerable, as if on breaking or vanishing point.
AMELIA RAATH
(Geb. 26 Augustus 1985)
Amelia Raath het haar BA Beeldende Kuns-graad in 2007 by die Universiteit van die Vrystaat ontvang en is tans besig met haar Meestersgraad in Beeldende Kuns by die Universiteit van die Vrystaat. Sy het aan verskeie uitstallings deelgeneem, soos die Sasol Nuwe Handtekeninge Kunskompetisie in 2007 in Pretoria en die Studente-uitstallings in die Johannes Stegmann-kunsgalery in Bloemfontein in 2005 – 2008. Sy was ook betrokke as kurator by verskeie uitstallings in die Johannes Stegmann-kunsgalery, soos By-Passing Catherine in 2007 en die Vierdejaarstudente uitstalling in 2008.
My Little Pony has been a part of Amelia Raath’s life since she can remember. They bombarded the toy market during the 1980’s and are still popular toys in the 21st century. She experiences them as ambivalent in nature, as they serve her inspiration – as muses – and at the same time as “her little demons”. This uncanny interplay between the polar opposites of demons and muses changes the apparently light-hearted My Little Pony toys into something more sinister. In her paintings she uses the My Little Pony as subject matter to play with different themes, like the apocalyptic horse.
P.W. BURGER
(Geb. 16 November 1977)
P.W. Burger het sy Diploma in Beeldende Kuns in 2000 by die Sentrale Universiteit van Tegnologie (SUT) in Bloemfontein voltooi. Hy het sy graad in 2001 ontvang en het in skilderkuns gespesialiseer. In 2006 het hy as ‘n deeltydse lektor in beeldende kuns by die Sentrale Universiteit van Tegnologie begin werk. Burger bied gereeld kunswerkswinkels regoor die land aan. Hy is tans besig met sy Meerstersgraad in Kunsfilosofie en Skilderkuns, en gee informele skilderlesse by Oliewenhuis vir volwassenes in sy vrye tyd. Hy skep ook kommersiële kunswerke en spesialiseer as ‘n tegniekkunstenaar vir die versiering van huise en kantore. Burger neem deel aan prominente uitstallings soos die ABSA Atelier en die Sasol Nuwe Handtekeninge Kunskompetisie.
P.W. Burger views artworks as vehicles that have the potential to question absolute truths and reveal hidden meanings. He explores its ambiguous nature and surplus meanings in his own work by making use of symbols. In his painting, The Shape Shifter (2006), the shape shifter itself is a symbol of how art and science transform the ordinary into the extraordinary, and thus expanding universal and natural laws and principles of daily living. In The Constant Beginning (2006) he probes the potential meaning that resides in the polemical information that viewers derive from the artwork. Burger is interested in the ambiguous nature of interpretation and continues to explore different truths that artworks convey.
VICTOR GEDULD
(Geb. 3 November 1973)
Victor Geduld kom uit ‘n familie wat in kuns belanggestel het en hom gemotiveer het om self daarby betrokke te raak. Aangesien hy geen formele kunsopleiding gehad het nie, het sy familielede se skilderye gedien as inspirasie en blootstelling tot die skildermedium. Geduld neem elke jaar deel aan die ShopriteCheckers Kunskompetisie en skenk gereeld skilderye vir fondsinsamelings vir liefdadigheid, soos Ons Kinderhuis in Bloemfontein en KANSA. Hy neem gereeld aan uitstallings deel in Bloemfontein en in die res van die Vrystaat. Tans word van sy werk uitgestal in Excelcior by die Pelican Art-uitstalling.
Victor Geduld finds inspiration in the immediate world surrounding him, alert to anything that will catch his eye. As a child he used to peer through the windows of art galleries, absorbing influences from mostly South African artists. Images from magazines, of everyday life, function as inspiration for his ideas. As an accomplished realistic portrait painter, he enjoys exploring facial expressions of people from different cultures, but also focuses on issues that he feels is pertinent to his surroundings. He depicts both the mundane and the violent, and in this sense asking if the violent has not become part of the mundane. In his paintings he investigates the meaning behind the obvious, raising questions about the worth of everyday life.
MARJORIE HUMAN
(Geb. 23 Desember 1981)
Marjorie Human is tans besig om haar MA Beeldende Kunste-graad by die Universiteit van die Vrystaat te voltooi. Sy was betrokke by die Artists in Schools-projek, ‘n gemeenskap gebaseerde kunsinisiatief, as projek koördineerder van 2004 – 2008. Sy gee ook klas by Planet Pixl School of Advertising and Photography in Bloemfontein terwyl sy studeer en aan haar kunsloopbaan werk. Hierdie jaar het sy reeds aan verskeie groepuitstallings deelgeneem, onder andere in die Thompson-kunsgalery in Melville.
Human is interested in the global revival in the practice of painting. She explores the decorative pattern and pattern-making processes imbedded in new image-based media. Her painting practice calls to mind the obsessive, labour intensive acts of craft that are integrated with every day life. She uses pattern and decorative symbols out of everyday surfaces, such as printed textiles, wallpaper and graphic design as an abstract communication “language”. In her latest work she explores specific motifs out of South African popular culture, like the springbok and the rose. The springbok was once a powerful symbol of popular culture and part heraldry, but is currently degrading to a nostalgic and kitsch image, used in retrograde design. In her paintings Human strips the springbok of its power and signifies its decadent nature by the use of springbok skulls, which also refer to the 17th century Dutch Still Life theme, vanitas. Human also reduces the Victorian roses that were imported into the South African fashion through colonial influence, to their skeletal structure, and build them up again turning them into flowers with a hybrid character. By using decorative surfaces that seems to portray changing and conflicting cultural identity constructs, she tries to translate a sense of uncertainty about the promises of bliss made by superficially constructed appearances.
IZAK JANSE VAN RENSBURG
(Geb. 14 Augustus 1987)
Izak Janse van Rensburg het by Planet Pixl School of Advertising and Photography in Bloemfontein studeer en werk tans as grafiese ontwerper en fotograaf. Hy het van kleintyd af in die skepping van kuns belanggestel en gepoog om sy kreatiwiteit te ontwikkel. Hy het in 2006 en 2007 aan studente-uitstallings van Planet Pixl by Oliewenhuis Kunsmuseum in Bloemfontein deelgeneem.
Izak Janse van Rensburg tries to convey his experience of life by combining documentary and fine art photography. He explores the meaning behind the everyday, trying to catch something fresh and unsuspected on film. He enjoys taking photographs that suggest a narrative and incite people to think outside their frame of reference. He believes that a photographer needs a bit of luck and a lot of patience to wait for the moment to take a perfect shot.
M.C. ROODT
(Geb. 27 Julie 1986)
M.C. Roodt is ‘n kunstenaar wat in die Noord-Kaap gebore is en tans Beeldende Kuns by die Sentrale Universiteit van Tegnologie in Bloemfontein studeer. Sy monodrukke, Summer Mu & Psychiatrists’s Chair en My TV Does Not See Me is onlangs by die permanente versameling van die Nasionale William Humphrey-kunsgalery in Kimberley ingesluit.
M.C. Roodt works in a variety of media and experiments frequently with the characteristics and limitations of such media. His work examines the structures and paradigms embedded within the legacy of western determinist reasoning. His work, as medium-specific investigation, can thus be paralleled with the function of thought as binding “medium” in the mentioned worldview. Currently Roodt is investigating the proposition that the classification of intangible thoughts, abstract emotions and behaviour changes their context by associating them with a pre-existing model which was not an intrinsic part of the processes that led to their inception in the first place. This impartial model de-humanises the individual through classification and reassembles identity to form a mere sum of biologically measured and understood fragmented parts. The nature and outcomes of such conceptual and linguistic structures presupposes an impartial reality free from cultural and personal identity. Roodt probes at what effects this has on the process of reciprocity.

