fbpx
Wikipedia

Willem Boshoff

Willem Boshoff (born 1951, Johannesburg, South Africa) is one of South Africa's foremost contemporary artists and regularly exhibits nationally and internationally.[1]

Willem Boshoff
Born1951
NationalitySouth African
Known forVisual art Conceptual art Sculpture
Websitewww.willemboshoff.com

Boshoff spent his childhood in Vanderbijlpark, which is a town located next to the Vaal River, located approximately seventy five kilometers south of Johannesburg. His father, Martiens, was a carpenter which allowed him to develop a love for working with wood. This had a large influence on his current technical expertise. Boshoff is known primarily for his conceptual installations. The way he communicates his ideas and has a social responsibility is what makes Boshoff a conceptual artist.[2] According to a book that was written by Ivan Vladislavić, he states that Willem Boshoff is "an artist who had been creating unusual art since the Seventies, although he came to widespread public attention with his installation The Blind Alphabet at the Johannesburg Biennale, Africus 95.”[3] “Calling himself a ‘linguistic terrorist,’ Boshoff stresses not only that he has claimed all languages as a weapon in an artistic war against cultural hegemony, but also that his tactics are unconventional.”[4]

Boshoff's academic career stretches beyond a span of twenty years. He trained as a teacher at the Johannesburg College of Art before pursuing a diploma in fine art, with an emphasis on printmaking, in 1980. He received a master's degree in sculpture from Technikon Witwatersrand in 1984. He made study trips to Austria and Germany in 1982, as well as to England, Wales, and Scotland in 1993.[1] He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Johannesburg in 2008.[5]

Boshoff, one of South Africa's most established artists, has joined the Department of Fine Arts as a mentor for postgraduate students. Prof. Boshoff, whose work has been shown extensively in South Africa and internationally, will serve as mentor and resident artist in the department. Prof. Boshoff made his mark at the university in 2011 when his Thinking Stone sculpture, one of sixteen artworks commissioned by the Sculpture-on-Campus project, was installed near the Main Building. The "Black Belfast " granite stone, situated next to the H vd Merwe Scholtz Hall, weighs approximately 20 ton and, to date,is the largest of the artworks funded by the National Lottery Distribution Trust fund. Mr Ben Botma, Head of the Department of Fine Arts, says Prof. Boshoff, who is based in Gauteng, will work on the Bloemfontein Campus for certain months of the year. "As an artist he is extremely productive and has an impressive international exhibition programme. As a result he has a good overview of what happens in the most important museums and contemporary galleries. This information and insight can be shared with students with great success." Mr Botma says although the mentorship is aimed at postgraduate students, Prof. Boshoff's presence and obsessive work habits will also motivate and inspire undergraduate students. "Willem is very popular as external examiner and moderator at other universities and he has a good perspective of what happens at the major universities".[6] Boshoff would eventually leave the University and focus on becoming a professional artist.[7]

His installations are frequently based on the exploration of language and are created in materials ranging from stone to paper to sand.[5] Boshoff has also worked with plant-related art pieces. He submitted a piece into the GrowBox Art Project that referenced the Biblical parable of the sower sowing seed on the rocky ground.[7]

Exhibitions edit

Boshoff's work was first exhibited in 1981, and in 1985 as part of a travelling group exhibition of South African Art in South Africa and to West Germany, titled 'Tributaries'.[8] His work has subsequently been exhibited in numerous worldwide exhibitions, such as: the 1st Johannesburg Biennial (Africus), 1995;[9] the 23rd International Biennial of São Paulo, 1996;[10] the 2nd Johannesburg Biennial, 1997;[11] 'Memory, Intimacy Traces' (Intimas Memorias Marcas) curated by Fernando Alvim at Pavilhãoa Branco, at the Museu da Cidade in Lisbon, Portugal and touring to the Museum of Modern Art, Antwerp, Belgium in 2000. In 1999, his installation 'Garden of words II' was exhibited at the 8th Floralies Internationales, Nantes, France and his work was also exhibited as part of a group show titled: 'Conceptualist Art: Points of Origin 1950s–1980s' at the Queens Museum of Art, New York and travelled to the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis in 2000. In the same year his work was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, Antwerp, Belgium; The White Box Gallery, Chelsea, New York; Havana Biennial, Cuba; Bildmuseet, Umea, Sweden; Via Cesare Correnti, Milan, Italy; Museo Nacional, Centro deArte, Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain (as part of the exhibition: Visiones del Sur: No es sólo lo que ves: pervirtiendo minimalismo, curated by Gerardo Mosquera).

In 2001 his work was shown at Den Frie Centre of Contemporary Art (Den Frie Udstillingsbygning), Copenhagen, Denmark; Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Germany (as part of the group exhibition: 'Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa') travelling to the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA. His work was also seen at the 49th Venice Biennial as part of the exhibition Authentic/Ex-centric: Africa In and Out Africa curated by Olu Oguibe and Okwui Enwezor and at Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam as part of the curated exhibition: 'Unpacking Europe' by Salah Hassan and Iftikhar Dadi (13 December 2001 – 24 February 2002). In 2002, his installation: 'Garden of Words II' was exhibited at Vandskel Kunstcentret, Silkeborg Bad, Denmark; at Camouflage, Observatorio, Brussels and in Switzerland in 2003. In 2003 his work was also exhibited at Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Boston, USA; Galerie Asbæk, Copenhagen, Denmark as part of the exhibition: 'Sted/Place' and Musee departmental de la Haute-Saône Albert Demard, Champlitte, France.

2005 saw his work exhibited at the 'Textures' exhibition at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, USA and in 2008 his work formed part of an exhibition curated by Stichting Sonsbeek in Arnhem, Netherlands.

In 2009 he presented a performance at Art Basel, titled: 'The Big Druid in his Cubicle'; in 2010 his work was exhibited at Kunsthalle, Göppingen, Germany in a group exhibition 'Happy End' curated by Annett Reckert; Daimler Contemporary Gallery, Berlin as part of 'Ampersand' curated by Christian Ganzenberg and an installation at Hyde Park Shopping Centre, London, UK.

Notable works edit

Children of the Stars edit

Children of the Stars is a combination of two different themes: science and religion.[2] Boshoff uses the same concept from his art piece Circle of Knowledge. Engraving words into boulders in different languages.[2]

Circle of Knowledge edit

Kring van Kennis (mostly known as the Circle of Knowledge) is an art piece that consists of eleven black granite boulders with planed tops and rough-hewn sides.[2] This was a commission given to the artist by the University of Johannesburg. Each granite boulder has engravings of the eleven official South African languages(including English). The phrases are engraved in a spiral formation on the planed top. Boshoff explains why using the South African languages is important in this piece.[2]

The Blind Alphabet edit

"The Blind Alphabet Project is a continuing work, designed primarily for blind people. It is a hands-on sculpture, its many pieces sculpted from a range of woods which are soft to the touch. Each word-sculpture is about the size of a rugby ball, easy to pick up, fondle and then pass on to others."[12] Boshoff creates multiple art pieces and groups them to represent the different letters in the alphabet. The reason why Boshoff created this art piece is to make an installation that would be blind-friendly. The information about the pieces can be understood by reading the braille on them, giving the blind an advantage against those who are sighted.[13] "In the same privileged environment of the art gallery the Blind Alphabet enables the visually impaired to reverse the conventional set-up, by guiding the sighted and interpreting art for them."[12]

Panifice edit

Panifice is number of bread loafs on breadboards with the verse of the Gospel of Matthew inscribed on the board in an extant European language.[14] There are also boards with an inscribed African language using the same verse. The breadboards are made of black granite and they are used to represent gravestones. This piece used to represent the idea of sharing meaning. "Is meaning encountered in the humane gesture of reaching out to the other in his or her otherness, enriching the self by the experience of the other, or is meaning dictated by casting the self in stone and exporting it to distant consumers, presumably in need of self like the one and only self?"[14] Boshoff's art style is compared to Marcel Duchamp's, stating that Duchamp disenfranchises art as masterpieces while Boshoff disenfranchises art as connoisseurs of the finest things in life.[14]

Online reviews/listings edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sue Williamson (August 2001). "Willem Boshoff". ARTTHROB. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e Staden-Garbett, Miranthe. 2009. "The worldcentric art of Willem Boshoff: an analysis of artefact and discipline in Children of the Stars." South African Journal of Art History 24, no. 2: 114-127.
  3. ^ Murray, Sally‐Ann. 2008. "On ivan vladislavić on willem boshoff on conceptual art." Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa 20, no. 1: 16-37. https://doi.org/10.1080/1013929X.2008.9678287
  4. ^ Dapena-Tretter, Antonia. 2018. “Willem Boshoff’s Visual Lists: A Personal Plea for Cultural Preservation” Seismopolite. Seismopolite Journal of Art and Politics. https://www.seismopolite.com/willem-boshoff-s-visual-lists-a-personal-plea-for-cultural-preservation
  5. ^ a b Ecotopian States. "Willem Boshoff". Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  6. ^ UFS. "Prof. Willem Boshoff joins Department of Fine Arts". Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  7. ^ a b Zeitz MOCAA. n.d. "Art and Artists: Willem Boshoff." Accessed October 21, 2021. https://zeitzmocaa.museum/artists/willem-boshoff/.
  8. ^ "Review: 'A feature on an artist in the public eye' on Artthrob by Sue Williamson, Archive: Issue No. 48, August 2001. See: Curriculum Vitae, selected exhibitions". Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  9. ^ Ruth Rosengarten (June–August 1995). . Frieze Magazine. No. 23. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  10. ^ "News: "The Sao Paulo Biennale opens October 2" on Artthrob". Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  11. ^ Perryer, Sophie (2004). Book: '10 Years 100 Artists: Art in a Democratic South Africa' pg 435, Biennials/ Festivals/ Mega-Exhibitions. ISBN 9781868729876. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  12. ^ a b Creative Feel. 2020. “Q&A With Willem Boshoff: Expanding the Range of Sensory Engagement.” Creative Feel. https://creativefeel.co.za/2020/11/expanding-the-range-of-sensory-engagement-a-qa-with-willem-boshoff/.
  13. ^ Krut, David. 2005. “Willem Boshoff.” Art Africa Magazine. https://artafricamagazine.org/willem-boshoff-4
  14. ^ a b c Hassan, Salah and Dabi, Iftikhar. 2001. Unpacking Europe: Towards a Critical Reading. Rotterdam, The Netherlands: Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. 308-313.

External links edit

willem, boshoff, rugby, league, international, rugby, league, born, 1951, johannesburg, south, africa, south, africa, foremost, contemporary, artists, regularly, exhibits, nationally, internationally, born1951johannesburg, south, africanationalitysouth, africa. For the rugby league international see Willem Boshoff rugby league Willem Boshoff born 1951 Johannesburg South Africa is one of South Africa s foremost contemporary artists and regularly exhibits nationally and internationally 1 Willem BoshoffBorn1951Johannesburg South AfricaNationalitySouth AfricanKnown forVisual art Conceptual art SculptureWebsitewww wbr willemboshoff wbr com Boshoff spent his childhood in Vanderbijlpark which is a town located next to the Vaal River located approximately seventy five kilometers south of Johannesburg His father Martiens was a carpenter which allowed him to develop a love for working with wood This had a large influence on his current technical expertise Boshoff is known primarily for his conceptual installations The way he communicates his ideas and has a social responsibility is what makes Boshoff a conceptual artist 2 According to a book that was written by Ivan Vladislavic he states that Willem Boshoff is an artist who had been creating unusual art since the Seventies although he came to widespread public attention with his installation The Blind Alphabet at the Johannesburg Biennale Africus 95 3 Calling himself a linguistic terrorist Boshoff stresses not only that he has claimed all languages as a weapon in an artistic war against cultural hegemony but also that his tactics are unconventional 4 Boshoff s academic career stretches beyond a span of twenty years He trained as a teacher at the Johannesburg College of Art before pursuing a diploma in fine art with an emphasis on printmaking in 1980 He received a master s degree in sculpture from Technikon Witwatersrand in 1984 He made study trips to Austria and Germany in 1982 as well as to England Wales and Scotland in 1993 1 He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Johannesburg in 2008 5 Boshoff one of South Africa s most established artists has joined the Department of Fine Arts as a mentor for postgraduate students Prof Boshoff whose work has been shown extensively in South Africa and internationally will serve as mentor and resident artist in the department Prof Boshoff made his mark at the university in 2011 when his Thinking Stone sculpture one of sixteen artworks commissioned by the Sculpture on Campus project was installed near the Main Building The Black Belfast granite stone situated next to the H vd Merwe Scholtz Hall weighs approximately 20 ton and to date is the largest of the artworks funded by the National Lottery Distribution Trust fund Mr Ben Botma Head of the Department of Fine Arts says Prof Boshoff who is based in Gauteng will work on the Bloemfontein Campus for certain months of the year As an artist he is extremely productive and has an impressive international exhibition programme As a result he has a good overview of what happens in the most important museums and contemporary galleries This information and insight can be shared with students with great success Mr Botma says although the mentorship is aimed at postgraduate students Prof Boshoff s presence and obsessive work habits will also motivate and inspire undergraduate students Willem is very popular as external examiner and moderator at other universities and he has a good perspective of what happens at the major universities 6 Boshoff would eventually leave the University and focus on becoming a professional artist 7 His installations are frequently based on the exploration of language and are created in materials ranging from stone to paper to sand 5 Boshoff has also worked with plant related art pieces He submitted a piece into the GrowBox Art Project that referenced the Biblical parable of the sower sowing seed on the rocky ground 7 Contents 1 Exhibitions 2 Notable works 2 1 Children of the Stars 2 2 Circle of Knowledge 2 3 The Blind Alphabet 2 4 Panifice 3 Online reviews listings 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksExhibitions editBoshoff s work was first exhibited in 1981 and in 1985 as part of a travelling group exhibition of South African Art in South Africa and to West Germany titled Tributaries 8 His work has subsequently been exhibited in numerous worldwide exhibitions such as the 1st Johannesburg Biennial Africus 1995 9 the 23rd International Biennial of Sao Paulo 1996 10 the 2nd Johannesburg Biennial 1997 11 Memory Intimacy Traces Intimas Memorias Marcas curated by Fernando Alvim at Pavilhaoa Branco at the Museu da Cidade in Lisbon Portugal and touring to the Museum of Modern Art Antwerp Belgium in 2000 In 1999 his installation Garden of words II was exhibited at the 8th Floralies Internationales Nantes France and his work was also exhibited as part of a group show titled Conceptualist Art Points of Origin 1950s 1980s at the Queens Museum of Art New York and travelled to the Walker Art Center Minneapolis in 2000 In the same year his work was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art Antwerp Belgium The White Box Gallery Chelsea New York Havana Biennial Cuba Bildmuseet Umea Sweden Via Cesare Correnti Milan Italy Museo Nacional Centro deArte Reina Sofia Madrid Spain as part of the exhibition Visiones del Sur No es solo lo que ves pervirtiendo minimalismo curated by Gerardo Mosquera In 2001 his work was shown at Den Frie Centre of Contemporary Art Den Frie Udstillingsbygning Copenhagen Denmark Museum Villa Stuck Munich Germany as part of the group exhibition Short Century Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa travelling to the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago USA His work was also seen at the 49th Venice Biennial as part of the exhibition Authentic Ex centric Africa In and Out Africa curated by Olu Oguibe and Okwui Enwezor and at Museum Boijmans van Beuningen Rotterdam as part of the curated exhibition Unpacking Europe by Salah Hassan and Iftikhar Dadi 13 December 2001 24 February 2002 In 2002 his installation Garden of Words II was exhibited at Vandskel Kunstcentret Silkeborg Bad Denmark at Camouflage Observatorio Brussels and in Switzerland in 2003 In 2003 his work was also exhibited at Rose Art Museum Brandeis University Boston USA Galerie Asbaek Copenhagen Denmark as part of the exhibition Sted Place and Musee departmental de la Haute Saone Albert Demard Champlitte France 2005 saw his work exhibited at the Textures exhibition at the National Museum of African Art Smithsonian Institution Washington DC USA and in 2008 his work formed part of an exhibition curated by Stichting Sonsbeek in Arnhem Netherlands In 2009 he presented a performance at Art Basel titled The Big Druid in his Cubicle in 2010 his work was exhibited at Kunsthalle Goppingen Germany in a group exhibition Happy End curated by Annett Reckert Daimler Contemporary Gallery Berlin as part of Ampersand curated by Christian Ganzenberg and an installation at Hyde Park Shopping Centre London UK Notable works editChildren of the Stars edit Children of the Stars is a combination of two different themes science and religion 2 Boshoff uses the same concept from his art piece Circle of Knowledge Engraving words into boulders in different languages 2 Circle of Knowledge edit Kring van Kennis mostly known as the Circle of Knowledge is an art piece that consists of eleven black granite boulders with planed tops and rough hewn sides 2 This was a commission given to the artist by the University of Johannesburg Each granite boulder has engravings of the eleven official South African languages including English The phrases are engraved in a spiral formation on the planed top Boshoff explains why using the South African languages is important in this piece 2 The Blind Alphabet edit The Blind Alphabet Project is a continuing work designed primarily for blind people It is a hands on sculpture its many pieces sculpted from a range of woods which are soft to the touch Each word sculpture is about the size of a rugby ball easy to pick up fondle and then pass on to others 12 Boshoff creates multiple art pieces and groups them to represent the different letters in the alphabet The reason why Boshoff created this art piece is to make an installation that would be blind friendly The information about the pieces can be understood by reading the braille on them giving the blind an advantage against those who are sighted 13 In the same privileged environment of the art gallery the Blind Alphabet enables the visually impaired to reverse the conventional set up by guiding the sighted and interpreting art for them 12 Panifice edit Panifice is number of bread loafs on breadboards with the verse of the Gospel of Matthew inscribed on the board in an extant European language 14 There are also boards with an inscribed African language using the same verse The breadboards are made of black granite and they are used to represent gravestones This piece used to represent the idea of sharing meaning Is meaning encountered in the humane gesture of reaching out to the other in his or her otherness enriching the self by the experience of the other or is meaning dictated by casting the self in stone and exporting it to distant consumers presumably in need of self like the one and only self 14 Boshoff s art style is compared to Marcel Duchamp s stating that Duchamp disenfranchises art as masterpieces while Boshoff disenfranchises art as connoisseurs of the finest things in life 14 Online reviews listings editA feature on an artist in the public eye Artthrob by Sue Williamson Issue 48 August 2001 Available online http www artthrob co za 01aug artbio html Willem Boshoff at the Goodman Gallery 18 August 24 September 2011 Artthrob by Matthew Partridge Available online http www artthrob co za Reviews 2011 08 Matthew Partridge reviews SWAT by Willem Boshoff at Goodman Gallery aspx The answer is under the rock Willem Boshoff interviewed by Johan Thom Art South Africa Magazine V4 5 2006 Also available online http artsouthafrica com article 76 Inside Out The Johannesburg Biennale by Ruth Rosengarten Frieze Magazine Issue 23 June August 1995 Also available online http www frieze com issue article inside out1 See also editInstallation art Sculpture Concrete Poetry List of concrete and visual poetsReferences edit a b Sue Williamson August 2001 Willem Boshoff ARTTHROB Retrieved 11 July 2011 a b c d e Staden Garbett Miranthe 2009 The worldcentric art of Willem Boshoff an analysis of artefact and discipline in Children of the Stars South African Journal of Art History 24 no 2 114 127 Murray Sally Ann 2008 On ivan vladislavic on willem boshoff on conceptual art Current Writing Text and Reception in Southern Africa 20 no 1 16 37 https doi org 10 1080 1013929X 2008 9678287 Dapena Tretter Antonia 2018 Willem Boshoff s Visual Lists A Personal Plea for Cultural Preservation Seismopolite Seismopolite Journal of Art and Politics https www seismopolite com willem boshoff s visual lists a personal plea for cultural preservation a b Ecotopian States Willem Boshoff Retrieved 11 July 2011 UFS Prof Willem Boshoff joins Department of Fine Arts Retrieved 3 January 2019 a b Zeitz MOCAA n d Art and Artists Willem Boshoff Accessed October 21 2021 https zeitzmocaa museum artists willem boshoff Review A feature on an artist in the public eye on Artthrob by Sue Williamson Archive Issue No 48 August 2001 See Curriculum Vitae selected exhibitions Retrieved 18 July 2012 Ruth Rosengarten June August 1995 Inside Out The Johannesburg Biennale Frieze Magazine No 23 Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 23 January 2019 News The Sao Paulo Biennale opens October 2 on Artthrob Retrieved 18 July 2012 Perryer Sophie 2004 Book 10 Years 100 Artists Art in a Democratic South Africa pg 435 Biennials Festivals Mega Exhibitions ISBN 9781868729876 Retrieved 18 July 2012 a b Creative Feel 2020 Q amp A With Willem Boshoff Expanding the Range of Sensory Engagement Creative Feel https creativefeel co za 2020 11 expanding the range of sensory engagement a qa with willem boshoff Krut David 2005 Willem Boshoff Art Africa Magazine https artafricamagazine org willem boshoff 4 a b c Hassan Salah and Dabi Iftikhar 2001 Unpacking Europe Towards a Critical Reading Rotterdam The Netherlands Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen 308 313 External links edithttps movingcube uj ac za 3d gallery blind alphabet letter b barbery bigeminate https movingcube uj ac za watch blind alphabet documentary series brief history willem boshoffs blind alphabet http www willemboshoff com http www willemboshoff com documents artworks young guns htm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Willem Boshoff amp oldid 1139245199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.