Christian Nerf
Participation, collaboration, and collective action are central to Nerf’s ‘exercises’, a series of mark-making strategies to be performed by others in response to the question: "how much of the work, or rather the workings, could be left in the hands of others?" Of these, two have appeared at A4 – Working With Obstacles (2012–) and Teaching Teachers (2016–). In both, the artist demonstrates a rudimentary drawing technology that circumvents ideas of creative intention and ‘the artist’s hand’, employing protocols and automatic processes that are easily shared and reproduced. The title of Working With Obstacles extends the idea of collaboration – of ‘working with’ someone – to inanimate objects, the participants instructed to navigate a given obstacle while simultaneously drawing a line in crayon directly on the wall. The cumulative effect of this action is an abstract drawing that recalls the movements of so many individuals united in a single task. The 2019 iteration of the work at A4 took place during Nerf’s Summer School for children.
b.1970, Johannesburg
A reluctance to category has defined much of Christian Nerf’s practice, as too has a dedication to rule-based experimentation. He is simultaneously a maker of structures and instructions and resistant to established constraints and institutional bureaucracies. This tension – between self-generated and socially expected boundaries – has come to characterise a seeming miscellany of actions, objects, and traces. “What threads, what bookends, what rules have been at work: what accommodates the freedom to play?” He asked in a process project, Archive as Terrarium | Part 3, at A4 Arts Foundation in 2019. “It’s easy to forget that to ‘play by one’s own rules’, one has to first go to the effort to grasp those rules that are already in play.” Collaboration (with people, plants and chance) has long offered Nerf a working logic, where artmaking is reconsidered as a learning exercise in pursuit of 'uncalled-for-newness'. Now in his ‘post-collaborative’ mode, he remains, as ever, hard to pin down – though his studio is no longer itinerant as it once was; the artist now a longstanding resident at Atlantic House. Automated drawings have since become central to his strategy of making, their mechanisms making them endlessly reproducible and shareable.