George Mahashe
Dr Mahashe works around the field of photography, particularly at the intersection of artistic practice, archives, anthropology, and society and technology. His research takes khelobedu as a central idea, drawing on its capacity for complicating ways of knowing. His current project ‘––defunct context’ investigates the creative potential of a pavilion (as an exhibitionary platform) for exploiting the gaps inherent in popular approaches to transforming institutions like ethnographic museums’ and art schools’ approach to the photographic. This process has led to a prototype timber pavilion for hosting transdisciplinary exhibitions like the installation Camera Obscura #0 Thabana ya Dafida in his grandmother’s home village.
Mahashe is based at the Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town, where he convenes the Honours in Curatorship programme. He is also convenor of the 'Connect South Africa’ residency programme initiated through a collaboration between CERN and Pro Helvetia, focusing on science infrastructure in South Africa, Brazil, India and Chile. In this capacity, he is curating the residency programme in South Africa, facilitating two selected artists with scientists from South Africa’s astronomical observatories (SARAO and SAAO). Mahashe also serves as a member of the review committee for the Bible Society of South Africa’s translation of the Bible into the Khelobedu language. His latest camera obscura installation ‘Lebitla la Ngaka’ was on show at Javett-UP (Javett Art Centre at the University of Pretoria) between August 2021 and February 2022 as part of the exhibition Interfacing New Heavens. In this exhibition, he considers the limits of digital humanities and how not to lose sight of the idea of materiality associated with digital technologies. Mahashe is currently a visiting researcher with Artists in Labs (Institute for Cultural Studies in the Arts) at Zurich School of Arts, thinking through how artists collaborate with STEM fields, and how they contribute to the imaginings of technology and its possibilities. Mahashe is currently exhibiting U406, in collaboration with Iziko’s Bertram House museums, with a pavilion installation at the Bertram parking lot until February 2023.