July 2012

11th: So it is time for Sasol New Signatures again. Entered two pieces into the competition and both got in. So it seems that three is not the magic number after all, or is it? Lets see the year is 2012. Multiply two by zero, add one and two 2 and there you have three. Also last year my one entry got in and this year my two got in. Yes yes I know that makes three. So going on this evidence I would say that without doubt that three is the magic number.

This is almost a repeat of last year where I was stuck without transport for the day. No transport + unselected pieces being left at the submission point = annoyed Nandi.


Here are the bits of waffle that I put with my entries:


Die Oubaas: someone who is senior in terms of rank or age. A term that has connotations of the period of apartheid when the whites ruled and the blacks served. A term that can now be said, with its links to the past, to have negative undertones. entries

In Die Oubaas I wanted to explore the question of just how white people are perceived in the ‘Rainbow Nation’. They arrived on the continent with a technological advantage and proceeded to try and mould what they found to serve their wants. Over centuries they gained control. They knew what was best and how it should be done.

Then gradually, one by one, nations controlled by the recently arrived minorities were let go. In the case of South Africa this was 18 years ago but yet there remains a notion that the Whites are still in control, that they are living off the hard work of the black majority. Just recently Zuma stated that, “The ownership of the economy is still primarily in the hands of white males as it has always been”. This quote came just as I was putting together some of the basic traits for my white people in the ‘Oubaas’ series. A list of stereotypes ranging from the mild to the extreme, each containing just enough truth to reveal a certain resentment. A disquiet that all too often white people ignore because they know what is best and they are right. They are the Oubaas.

Man met Zonnebloemen: At the top of the road that I live in there is a field. Every year in April sunflowers flourish here. As if by magic they sprout up and slowly grow until the whole field is full of tall yellow blooms following the sun. The only sign of human intervention is a hosepipe snaking across the road. The source a tap in a garden of a home. The owner, a foul mouthed drunk with, it would appear, a penchant for beauty. The one and only time I’ve seen him he was completely lost in his ranting, the use of a hooter by a delivery man having launched him into a hyper critical diatribe.

I set up my camera to take a self portrait. As I stood in the field amidst all the splendor, a vague sense of unease haunted me. Though in an open field I was an intruder standing amidst the fruits of another’s labor. This other being in possession of a rage that I feared confronting. A rage that even all the cheery yellow of the flowers could not soothe. Fortunately I remained undisturbed and was left with the incongruity of such beauty being born out of the hands of such fury