Art_Africa_2016_02_

(Jacob Rumans) #1
INTERVIEW / TANYA POOLE

THOZAMA AND ROSE / CHRISTIANE LANGE IN CONVERSATION WITH TANYA POOLE


THOZAMA AND ROSE


Christiane Lange in conversation with Tanya Poole


Galerie m Bochum, Germany, is currently hosting South African artist Tanya Poole’s
first major exhibition in Europe. A combination of large-scale ink drawings and video
installations, ‘Thozama and Rose’ confronts issues of motherhood, socio-economic
difference and conflict, born from the unexpected subject matter of karate.

Christiane Lange: The exhibition focuses on the story of two South African
women, Rose and Thozama. Could you tell me the story of these two?

Tanya Poole: I teach at the dojo (a place to train in Karate) and these two women came in
together to enroll in karate for the first time. Rose is a thirty-eight year-old middle-class
white South-African, who is a Doctor of Science at Rhodes University. She wanted the
exercise. Thozama, on the other hand, is a twenty-eight year-old local from the Eastern
Cape, who is quite religious. She had been through some trauma and had decided to take
on karate as a form of self-defense. I saw that they had a friendship but I didn’t know
their relationship. I later found out that Rose employs Thozama as her children’s nanny.
This is a very typical South African relationship, and yet they came to the dojo together.
They became very physical, aggressive and intimate all at the same time. I found this
fascinating.

It’s not the first time that karate and the idea of women fighting shows up in your
work. What is your personal experience with karate?

In the beginning I was intrigued by the notion of violence, aggression and conflict
within oneself. Over time, I realised that it was just a physical embodiment of cognitive
dissonance because every interaction in karate is also an interaction with the self. It was
a way for me to start playing those things out.

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