Jeanette Unite talks us through PLOT: Critical Zone at Iziko SA Museum

by | May 27, 2022 | Featured | 0 comments

Mining and Earth artist Jeannette Unite at Iziko South African Museum

Jeanette Unite talks us through PLOT: Critical Zone, at Iziko SA Museum, her visually exciting exhibition interrogating human beings’ relationship with minerals that are at the heart of mining, industrialisation, manufacture, and consumption.

Listen to the Sanlam Arts Round Up on Fine Music Radio FMR 101.3fm every Friday at 16h10.

As Jeanette explains, PLOT: Critical Zones,  visually records her research across more than 30 countries on how Earth is owned, measured, divided, allocated by title deeds, and legal rights over land and resources. Her artistic, archival, and on-the-ground research addresses the question of why Earth matters and interrogates human beings’ relationship with minerals that are at the heart of mining, industrialisation, manufacture, and consumption.

Jeanette UniteUnite has focused on Africa’s rich and contentious mineral histories and the ways humans exploit Earth. The plethora of minerals that are the ingredients of the manufactured goods in our contemporary lives is an essential subject of Unite’s artworks. This highly personalised body of work incorporate elements of the land, and her bar-code geo-seam mineral paintings are installed as a continuous lode. Her mining artworks are made from the very mined material they interrogate. The works exhibited include the use of detritus and materials sourced from site specific industrial mining sites that are considered contentious within the fragile human-environment relationship. The material is thus both subject and object in her predominantly large-scale art pieces.

She revisits the tradition of landscape painting as a response to ecological crises and contemporary understandings of materiality, critiquing the force of human compulsion for material goods regardless of environmental and social consequences. The exhibition details the artist’s collection and interpretation of images and minerals from the mining industry. She collaborates with geo-chemists, paint chemists and a ceramicist to develop her own paint and pastel recipes. Site-specific sands, oxides, metal salts and residues soiled with history and loaded with meaning are mixed into the paints that create these works.

Jeanette’s palette, organised in a unique periodic table, consists of jars filled with mined matter; both the precious ores used in industry and the slimes dams and tailing dumps she has collected from travels to remote extraction areas in 32 countries. Unite’s direct use of mined matter underpins her research-based practice which dwells on the ongoing role of mining in (re)producing colonial power relations.

PLOT: Critical Zones refers to the exploitation of natural resources regardless of the irreparable damage that results. It explores the cryptic contentious role the law plays in the distribution of land rights and the appropriation and damage of land. The exhibition calls for collective Earth Stewardship inciting collective response before it’s too late.

WHAT: Jeanette Unite – PLOT: Critical Zone
WHERE: Iziko South African Museum, 25 Queen Victoria Road, Cape Town 8001
WHEN: until 31 Dec 2022. Open daily from 09h00 until 17h00.
INFO: T 021 4813838 | Visit

IZIKO Museum Route

The WHAT, WHY & WHERE of the
arts scene in around Cape Town
see the 2022 arts + crafts map

and listen in to the Sanlam
Arts Round-Up Fridays @16h10
on Fine Music Radio FMR 101.3fm

 

You might also like…