U406 Pavilion Prototype 2
Wed Mar 8, 16:30 - Wed Mar 8, 19:30
Iziko Bertram House Museum
ABOUT
Ms Rooksana Omar, CEO of Iziko Museums of South Africa in partnership with the University of Cape Town cordially invites you to the exhibition opening titled:
U406 Pavilion Prototype 2
The exhibition offers an immersive live scene of the Iziko Bertram House, Old medical building, the sky, Mount Nelson’s façade and the Msisni tree - catalogued U406. These images, drawn from a camera obscura and framed by the many triangles making up the structure, are fleeting and do not repeat, so every encounter differs depending on the time of day or season.
The msinsi is significant because it brings to focus the idea of dingaka, who are placed by legend as liable to be buried under such trees, with all their technology/implements. At the same time across the garden from the timber pavilion, a Khelobedu material culture object associated with Dikoma, overlooks the scene, perhaps as a reminder that there are many ways to know and constitute a space of learning.
For the U406 installation, the camera obscura is not bound to a table surface like at Museum Africa and others in the country. Instead, it offers the audience a possibility to walk around a peephole camera obscura in an immersive 4m high cube, where they can find different images as if viewing multiple screens.
As is the nature of a prototype, the pavilion will change and morph over the next few months as we troubleshoot and chase after productive tangents invited by the process of realising the pavilion. You are invited to keep visiting to see its progress. The exhibition is a work-in-progress site and caution is advised when visiting the installation.
Date: Wednesday, 8 March 2023
Time: 16:30 for 17:00 until 19:00
Venue: Iziko Bertram House Museum, Garden Area, Hiddingh Campus, Orange Street, Cape Town
Enquiries: Shameem Adams, via email: [email protected] or tel: 021 481 3974
—defunct context is a research project by Dr George Mahashe, hosted around the theme of intangible heritage in collaboration with Iziko Museum. The project is supported by the UCT NRF BAAP grant and NIHSS Catalytic Research grant Vice Chancellor’s 2030 Future Leaders Project. This event is supported by the Michaelis Galleries.
