Forget me not
Details
Material
black paint and chalk on wall-mounted blackboard
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This contemporary artwork features a series of four black-and-white panels arranged in a grid. The visual elements include geometric shapes, lines, and patterns that create a striking contrast against the dark backgrounds. The subject matter appears to be a combination of abstract and symbolic motifs, with one panel depicting a machine-like structure and another featuring what resembles bat silhouettes. The overall artistic style is minimalist and precise, with the artist employing techniques such as etching or engraving to achieve the intricate designs. The context suggests this piece may explore themes of technology, nature, or industrial imagery, reflecting the artist's unique perspective on the modern world. ...

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Kemang Wa Lehulere
Artist
Kemang Wa Lehulere
B.1984, South African

Kemang Wa Lehulere’s practice engages with the past of South Africa, tracing the ways it still haunts the country’s current condition. Working with personal and collective histories and archives, the artist repeatedly employs found objects representing both individual and collective memory. Wooden, old-looking school desks or mass-produced ceramic sculptures of Alsatian dogs are at once familiar and alienating; a reminder from childhood also acting as a reminder of the complexity of social structures within the Apartheid regime of South Africa. Inspired by set design and theatre, Wa Lehulere’s drawings and ‘living sculptures’, comprising smudged chalk drawings on blackboards, sculptures made of grass and soil and wall etchings, further dwell on the processes of revision, juxtaposition and the malfunction of histories. By making history physical and personal, the artist contrasts liberation with repression and sharply connects the painful past with a painful present. ...

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