Mpho Masupit, Katse Dam, July, 2015
For more information please go to: davesouthwood.com
Excerpt from : https://lenscratch.com/2018/08/south-africa-week-4/
'In addition to the panoramas the Katse Dam series includes two portrait series of local herders. One of these subseries — the “Balaclava” collection — show close-up views of residents wearing a traditional headgear with only their eyes visible to the camera. This series closely resonates with the explorations of power, access, and visibility explored in the panorama images. Southwood describes himself as an artist who “considers questions of power and privilege in relation to portraiture” and finds an important encounter in these images, wherein subjects choose to obscure their faces for his photograph. The portraits further echo the latent tension Southwood perceives in the dam. The strobe lighting sets the subjects apart from dim surroundings and creates a theatrical disconnect symbolic of the literal restriction to the dam. In some of the portraits the dam is visible, once again making reference to the reservoir as a “blank and distant water mass” and as a “perpetual backdrop.”
Archival inkjet on Bartya Paper
L 105 x 84 cms edition 5+1 a/p
M 75 x 60 cms edition of 3+1 a/p
S 52 x 42 cms edition 3+1 a/p