Dim Corners
An OtherNetwork exhibition hosted by NGO-Nothing Gets Organised
November 16–December 15, 2024
Newtown
121 Lilian Ngoyi St
Johannesburg
2033
South Africa
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 9am–5pm
T +27 11 833 5624
Curated by Pivô.
In the dim, candlelit stillness of a blackout, the profound kinship between the power grid’s faltering pulse and the human body’s elusive balance becomes self-evident. Just as the ceaseless demands on an overstretched electrical system lead to an inevitable collapse, so do the relentless pressures of modern life erode our inner reserves, culminating in the all-too-familiar state of burnout. Like camera lenses, our eyes gradually adapt to the darkness, searching for light in the shadows, mirroring the resilience and adaptability required to navigate these moments of forced stillness. In each case, the fragility of overtaxed systems becomes apparent, and the flickering of lights and the dulling of spirits both signal a desperate need for rest, recovery, and a re-evaluation of our insatiable drive for productivity. In these moments of forced stillness, we may find an opportunity to reflect on the delicate equilibrium required to sustain our worn-out cities and bodies.
This resonance forms the thematic backbone of Dim Corners, an evocative exhibition in Johannesburg featuring new works by Brazilian artist Leticia Ramos and South African artist Zen Marie. The exhibition takes into account the city’s frequent energy shortages, and also the recent blackouts that São Paulo had experienced since this project started, weaving a narrative that intertwines the immediate physical impact with the broader, insidious issues of climate change and environmental racism. Ramos and Marie, through their distinct artistic lenses, lay bare the socio-economic and environmental crises underpinning these blackouts, urging viewers to confront the realities often left in the shadows.
With her meticulous photographic techniques and hauntingly detailed video installations, Leticia Ramos captures an undetected megalopolis with eerie, ephemeral quality under blackout conditions. Her work is a visual symphony of darkness and light, where the intermittent glow of emergency lights and candles becomes a metaphor for resilience amidst adversity. Ramos’ work documents these moments and provides a stark reminder of the inequities exacerbated by environmental degradation and climate change.
Zen Marie has created a multi-channel video work, filmed over six months while driving on the De Villiers Graaf elevated highway, commonly known as the double-decker highway, in Johannesburg, South Africa. His camera works in an attempt to understand this structure—its layers, concrete beams, and apertures—and serves as a basis for speculations on the city it bypasses. This work reflects on the highway’s design as a lingering fantasy of modernism, one that has evolved into a present marked by fleeting capital, hijacked buildings, and failing infrastructure.
Dim Corners is a pretext for a dialogue between two artists who didn’t know each other beforehand and who share similar concerns, while speaking from different angles of the Global South. Just as a city’s lights can dim without warning, so too can the vitality of its residents; both serve as reminders that when the systems in place fail, the consequences ripple far beyond mere inconvenience.
Dim Corners is curated by Pivô. The project is initiated within the context of OtherNetwork, a collaborative project that connects independent art spaces worldwide. The ongoing curatorial project of OtherNetwork takes the form of a relay: for this iteration, NGO-Nothing Gets Organised invited Pivô from São Paulo to guest curate an exhibition in Johannesburg.
OtherNetwork is a project by ifa—Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen in collaboration with Cookies.