Caitlin and I |
LiTer I |
Zinzi and Tozama II |
Caitlin and I |
Being is an exploration of both our existence and our
resistance as lesbians/women loving women, as black women living our
intersecting identities in a country that claims equality for all within
the LGBTI community, and beyond.
The work is aimed at erasing the very stigmatisation of our sexualities
as 'unAfrican', even as our very existence disrupts dominant
(hetero)sexualities, patriarchies and oppressions that were not of our
own making. Since slavery and colonialism, images of us African women
have been used to reproduce heterosexuality and white patriarchy, and
these systems of power have so organised our everyday lives that it is
difficult to visualise ourselves as we actually are in our respective
communities. Moreover, the images we see rely on binaries that were long
prescribed for us (hetero/homo, male/female, African/unAfrican). From
birth on, we are taught to internalise their existences, sometimes
forgetting that if bodies are connected, connecting, the sensuousness
goes beyond simplistic understandings of gender and sexuality.
Despite the fact that, in contrast to most other African states, our
South African Bill of Rights guarantees us legal protections against
homophobia, there are still no loving, intimate photographs of black
lesbians. As a visual artist, one is always confronted with the politics
of representation. I have the choice to portray my community in a
manner that will turn us once again into a commodity to be consumed by
the outside world, or to create a body of meaning that is welcomed by us
as a community of queer black women. I choose the latter path, because
it is through capturing the visual pleasures and erotica of my community
that our being comes into focus, into community and national
consciousness. And it is through seeing ourselves as we find love,
laughter, joy that we can sustain our strength and regain our sanity as
we move into a future that is sadly still filled with the threat of
insecurities - HIV/AIDS, hate crimes, violence against women, poverty,
unemployment.
In the past year, I have lost two of my friends to AIDS-related
illnesses (one in April 2006 and the other in March 2007). Both of these
women made herstory within the lesbian community, but because of
resource politics, their stories are not publicly celebrated.
Consequently, an aspect of these images is to create awareness around
how we as lesbians need to take precautions when we engage sexually with
other women. Researchers routinely perpetuate the wrong notion that we
are less at risk for infection and transmission because we do not sleep
with men. But the reality is that our fellow sistahs are raped and
killed in this country every day. I wanted to capture photographs of 'my
people' before we are no more.
Zanele Muholi
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