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Thoba, utsale umnxeba
Nicholas Hlobo
Artwork 2008
Installation photograph from ‘Crossing Night: Regional Identities x Global Context’ exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit. On the left, Nicholas Hlobo’s installation/performance piece ‘Thoba, utsale emnxeba’ occupies the corner of the gallery. On the right, three photographs from Sabelo Mlangeni’s series ‘Invisible Woman’ is mounted on the gallery wall.
Installation view: Crossing Night | Regional Identities x Global Context curated by Josh Ginsburg, Jova Lynne and Larry Ossei-Mensah in Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, October 25, 2019–February 2, 2020. Image courtesy of Clare Gatto.
Artist Nicholas Hlobo Title Thoba, utsale umnxeba Date 2008 Materials Carpet, rubber, fabric Dimensions Dimensions variable Credit Private collection

b.1975, Cape Town

Nicholas Hlobo is an artist of rare dexterity. In turn monumental and intimate, heavy and weightless, his works evade the themes ascribed to them, resisting facile explanation. Their titles, most often written in isiXhosa, only augment their uncertainty. Some read as unclear warnings – Zophalala futhi (They will fall apart again), Unojubalala (She is pale) – others incline towards the metaphysical; Izithunzi (The Shadows), Isisindo samadlozi (The weight of the ancestors), Uvuko (Resurrection). Hlobo moves fluently between performance, installation and painting (the imperfect word he uses for his hybrid works on canvas). In each, there is a tactile engagement with material – be it rubber, leather, copper wire or ribbon. For the artist, the materials are metaphorically charged and exist beyond their physical bounds. Assembled together, they become anthropomorphic abstractions; no longer threads and substrate but veins and skin. “In truth,” Hlobo says, “we’re all cords, plugs and connecting points; some split, some broken. Yet the body mends itself, the body continually grows. It’s a never-ending process, it’s a progression – and the mind does the same.” 

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