Authors
Tessa Lewin
Publication date
2020
Journal
The Aesthetics of Global Protest
Pages
39
Description
While the form of visual activism currently being developed in the United States and Western Europe is more commonly linked to street protests or activist campaigning and is often explicitly anti-capitalist, in South Africa visual activism has a different epistemological history and contemporary form. In the South African context, much visual activism is closely linked to the fine art market and its associated institutions. This is exemplified by the queer black South African photographer Zanele Muholi. Going beyond the body of work available on Muholi, however, this chapter uses the works of other South African artists, namely FAKA and Robert Hamblin, a fine art photographer, to explore visualactivism and the way in which it complicates/broadens conventional conceptions of activism.
Total citations
202120222023132
Scholar articles
T Lewin - The Aesthetics of Global Protest, 2020