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Suzie Pam-Grant
Suzie Pam-Grant
  • Johannesburg
  • South Africa
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USC Fisher Museum of Art and Suzie Pam-Grant are now friends Jul 8, 2010

Profile Information

Website
http://www.gallerymomo.com
Relationship status
married
Member type
Artist
If you're an artist, what kind of art do you make?
Conceptual, Installation, Performance, Sculpture, Video
About my artwork
Sue Pam-Grant’s exhibition, ‘Open at the seams’ was opened by William Kentridge at Gallery MOMO on Thursday 14 February 2008

For this exhibition Pam-Grant produced mixed media sculptural works, using calico cloth parchments, sewing pattern tissue, wallpaper, text and found objects, to name but a few. Conceptually, the work investigates the notion of ‘box’ as it transforms from ‘platform’ to ‘stage’, to ‘room’, archiving fragmented interior landscapes inside the form of the ‘specimen box’.

Here the ‘specimen’, the ephemeral memory, charged object or enlivened moment, is encased and brought up close for scrutiny and viceral examination.

Extending the works from assemblage to a moving image projection, she crosses the lines that divide the disciplines with her memorials that pay homage to the minutiae.
Artists I like
Louise Bourgeois, Doris Salcedo, William Kentridge, Marcel Duchamp, Joseph Cornel, Tadeus Kantor
Interests
I am an archaeologist at heart - digging for new portraits ....
I am also a Theatre practioner - I want to create dialogues - exchange conversations - and keep pushing boundaries as an artist ....and so I continue to dig - to dig deeper ...
Centre of the artworld:
New York, London, my studio, nowhere and everywhere

Review from Guard on Shift - Sue Pam- Grant - Installation/Encounter - johannesburg 2008


“Guard on Shift”, rips our complacency with crafted sound and a potent installation which moves us to a place deeper than obvious emotions.

“Guard on Shift” directed by Sue Pam-Grant with musical composition and direction by Xoli Norman. Designed by Danie Daschner and Christoff Wolmarans (set), Sue Pam-Grant and Jurgen Meekel (video), Sue Pam-Grant (costumes), Declan Randall (lighting). Performers: Lesedi Job, Thabo Mashishi, Yolandi Nortjie, Simphiwe Sekhute, Nqobile Sibeko and Sister Zungu. Dance Factory, Newtown. Until November 1. 011 833 1347.

You first notice the washing. Hand-made undergarments of unbleached calico, they hang, crumpled, vulnerable in stark light. Their videoed image is flung against the brickwork at the back of the stage, rising and falling with wind, like ghosts. But you notice this subliminally as you are jousted and shifted along by your fellow audience members through the installation.

The path is narrow, circumscribed by wire fencing. The plot is cast by a rudimentary maze, with bricks and wire. It is stultifying. My hand touched the wire at some point by mistake; I felt my whole body instinctively twinge; they aren't electrified. The power of the gesture of bringing the audience into the work compulsorily, conceptually and emotively yet never gratuitously, is incomparable. You find a seat in the auditorium, your heart rushing, plummeting, numbed.

The four women performers are stationed at points inaccessible by the maze. They are gated in. The culmination of the maze is the guard hut: a humble wooden structure, occupied by words, a crutch and tissue-filled shoes. The words are the inner dialogue of he who has this type of hut as his only resting spot, while at work, through the night. Like a vertical coffin, it’s just big enough to house a man seated or standing upright, this structure is iconic in our crime-thick society.

“Guard on Shift” is a tour de force. As it visually quotes suburban criticism of the typecast guard, but navigates his humanity, it is never prescriptive. In an unstated backdrop to the focus, we understand the protective role the guard on shift ostensibly offers people whose lives are deemed more valuable. But there’s another subtext, which left me driving back to suburbia looking at truck drivers on the highway, maids in doek and apron walking the dark streets, the guards on shift: those whose thankless, sometimes dangerous, jobs squeeze them into the bottom rung of our society in service of the middle class: the unthanked, the paltrily paid, the oft invisible.

The music is glorious in its discordant articulation. Think of the plaintive lyrics and musical phrasing in “Madam please”, Sophie Mgcina’s song. Think of the layering of social text and voice in Benjamin Britten’s “Peter Grimes”. Interspersed with Thabo Mashishi on the trumpet playing from the back of the auditorium, the sound achieves stunning cohesion, words drop from the four women’s mouths like pebbles.

“Guard on Shift” could fit into protest song repertoire, but for its lack of literality and the conceptual meat of its installation, as well as the interface between performers, audience and quoted words, criticising the nameless, faceless, personality-less archetypal guard, punched into the back wall of the stage. But the work is about more than poetically crafted lyrics and quoted emails. Its greatest strength is in its numbing repetition.

At the outset, the voices, the lined washing, the experience of the maze is electrifying. You don’t know where to look first. As the shift extends, the repertoire is repeated. The work lasts but 45 minutes; it telescopes the repetitiveness of guard work, graphically offering us a gloss on the time to contemplate many vulnerabilities, above all, one’s own.

“Guard on Shift” completely lacks self-indulgence - or even articulated (patronising) pity for these peripheral people. It’s a bare brutal portrayal of intransigent values that pepper and coddle us into a complacency of security. A lucid, wise piece that glosses the incompetence in the running of our country by pointing fingers within, not without.


Picture: Yes
Submitted by Robyn Sassen




Soundtrack for survival in destruction
November 4, 2008

By Adrienne Sichel

Guard on Shift

Theatre Installation: Sue Pam-Grant and Xoli Norman

Producer/Curator: Indra Wussow

Set: Daschner Designs

Lighting: Declan Randall

Performers: Thabo Mashishi (trumpet), Sister Zungu, Nqobile Sibeko, Yolandi Nortije, Lesedi Job, Simphiwe Sekhute

If a painting or a sculpture could sing its innermost thoughts and concerns it would sound like this - honest, haunting, disturbing and memorable.

The fact that this theatre installation produced by kunst:raum sylt quelle and jozi art lab, in association with The Market Theatre, has been curated (as any art exhibition would be), enriches the riveting cross-discipline interaction of this starkly poetic tour de force.

In her programme note the curator refers to the psycholo-gical contradictions prevalent in South African society and its suburbia as the "true 'heart of darkness' " and Guard on Shift's exploration of psychological landscapes and social paralysis.

If anyone could tackle this daunting brief in a subtly tactile yet devastatingly effective way it is Sue Pam-Grant. Her recent art making based on dressmaking patterns, dovetailing with her writing skills and theatrical experience, provides the visual anchor for Guard on Shift and a springboard for her rigorous collaboration with composer Xoli Norman and the six performers.

The spectator enters The Dance Factory side door (flanked by a real wire razor wire topped security fence) to be sucked into a maze of electric fencing containing four female figures placed on large crates (destined for Sydney? London?) . They are marked "Fragile" hand written on white tailoring tape. At the centre is a wooden guard's hut (festooned outside and inside with quotes like: "The guard sat on my cactus, the cactus died" and "I was hijacked"). His empty smart shoes are stuffed with paper. An old battered crutch simultaneously symbolises his absence, presence and our reliance on him to keep us safe.

His only true weapon as he (personified by Simphiwe Sekhute) walks around this fortress of fear (armed with a torch, a radio and a baton) is fortitude. At one point he becomes one of us seated in the auditorium providing an ironic subtext to the projected e-mails, from disgruntled homeowners, and the sung text.

A constant refrain in the song and image cycle (intercut with a giant video of white washing blowing in the wind, an animated version of the static shroud-like female garments which border the stage) are the Zulu words "We are like this".

Trumpeter Thabo Mashishi, on the lighting deck, plays a requiem, a strangulated last post, for an unravelling society. Xoli Norman's survival jazz seeps through the succinctly metaphoric design ruptures and vocal eruptions.

The lit white garments (which leave violent burn marks on the floor), and the static bodies, are trapped in an unsettling hyper-lit translucence. We are all in a jail of our own making.

Our saviour, the street security guard climbs a shaky steel tower, the lighthouse the singers plead for to dispel the darkness in our hearts. But the real heroes and beacons of intellectual and emotional light are the visionary artists.


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At 3:08pm on July 7, 2009, alison williamsalison williams said…
dear suzie you not in here much eh :0

please send you work in avi format or .mov as soon as possible to josedrummond@gmail.com
it is selected for the first HEP China screening in august - i send hard cipies but he now needs the avi or .mov files. let me know as soon as you done it tks

send direct to him not to me ok
At 4:47am on December 8, 2008, Minas HalajMinas Halaj said…
/ " />thanks this is my recent video
At 6:31pm on November 26, 2008, Suzie Pam-GrantSuzie Pam-Grant said…
excellent! thanks
At 9:13am on November 26, 2008, Minas HalajMinas Halaj said…
At 10:11am on November 21, 2008, antonio sammartanoantonio sammartano said…
hello suzie.
thanks for your compliments for my opera "fragile".
I hope to write good English....
I have an "artist residence" in sicily ( trapani city).
in January 2009 I open a new artgallery in trapani.
in June 2009 will also open an art park and teatre in segesta( trapani) very beautiful site.
hope that in future we can work together.
however we must thank her for contact sue kennigton.
I have prepared your page on magnetikzone artist a-z.
http://www.magnetikzone.com/?page=212-102
ciao
antonio
At 9:51am on November 20, 2008, antonio sammartanoantonio sammartano said…
Hello suzie, i love your work! very interesting.
sue contact my for look your work.
in the future is possible collaboration and your exibhition in italy.
I like insert your work in my project web: www.magnetikzone.com send my your cv and photo work in infomagnetikzone@libero.it
ciao
At 3:35am on November 19, 2008, Paula LouwPaula Louw said…
Thanks suzie! Glad you like them. I'm mainly with Everard Read. But this new work, Shift, is going down to Knysna for a show there, with Trent Read, opening 28 Nov. I'm having a big show in June next year. I've also been doing some etchings recently.
Is your work showing anywhere at the moment? It's very cool...your slide show is running as I write, stunning! I'm never too sure how this site works...
At 10:20pm on November 18, 2008, MarinaMarina said…
HI, Suzie
you do a great stof!!!! I have been looking your artworks again and again - would love to se on real!
all the best - Marina
At 9:31pm on November 18, 2008, Louise GainsLouise Gains said…
Hi, Suzie, I am also going to take part in the HEP and I saw your work when I looked at the other Artists taking part -- I am contacting Artist about my new webite for Digital Art and I wondered if you ever produced Art-work on the computer? You work is so refreshingly different.
I am inviting Artsits to look at my new website www.inyouri.com -- It is for Selling and Trading Digital Art. I hope you have time to viste - it is for brand new and unique to the site Art-Work.
all the best, Louise
At 7:33pm on November 18, 2008, Paula LouwPaula Louw said…
Hi sue...I'd like you to be a friend on art review. Nice to see someone from home...johannesburg! Absolutely LOVE that image...your work looks stunning!
Bye for now,
from Paula
 
 
 

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