Wikipedia:WikiAfrica/Stubs/Peter van Heerden

Peter van Heerden
Born1973
NationalitySouth African
Known forPerformance art
Websitehttp://www.erf81.co.za/erf81.htm


Peter van Heerden (b. 1973) is a South African performance artist living and working in Cape Town. His performances often address the idea of saamtrekking or pulling together, a method of practice that can be experienced and shared by all races, colours, and creeds of South Africans.[1] Van Heerdens work is an investigation into masculinity and identity through cathartic performance.[2] Van Heerden’s performance interventions question how the privileged perform themselves once their privilege is deflated.[3]

Education

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van Heerden completed his Masters Degree (Cum Laude) in Drama at the University of Cape Town in 2004.[1]

Career

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  • Artist in Residence at Towson University, Baltimore, USA[4]
  • So is ën os gemaak, Grahamstown Festival
  • Bok, KZNSA Gallery for YAP 2005-2006
  • 6 minutes, FNB Dance Umbrella 2007, Johannesburg
  • Flowers for my flesh, Spier Contemporary 2007
  • An Histrionic, with Bettina Malcomess, Infecting the City 2009
  • out of the eater came forth meat out of the strong came forth sweet, FNB Dance Umbrella 2009
  • Lecturer in live performance, City Varsity, Cape Town[4]
  • erf[81] collective[5]

Notable Works

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Ubuntu

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Ubuntu explores white masculinity, especially in the context of contemporary Africa.[6] van Heerden describes the subject: "Ubuntu can be seen as a recipe for living together; a classical concept of 'I am complete in you and you are completed in me.' Ubuntu is not a word; it is a form of practice, an active way of being."[4]

Die Uitlander, the African and the Vrouw

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Performed at the Spier Contemporary, 2007.[1] A site-specific live art installation dedicated to the women of Africa, this piece explores the dedication and resolve that South African women have shown in support of their men at war.

Bok challenges notions of Afrikaner masculinity in contemporary South Africa, as the place of the Afrikaner male in society has shifted since the end of apartheid.[7] Re-enactments of assassinations and executions during the Anglo Boer War provide an historical framework for this exploration, with the use of video and sound installations as well.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Pather, Jay (2007). Spier Contemporary 2007 Catalogue. Cape Town: Africa Centre. p. 261.
  2. ^ "BOK: A Video Installation by Peter Van Heerden". Absolute Arts. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  3. ^ "Lecture: The Performance Interventions of Peter Van Heerden". University of Minnesota. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "South African Performance Artist Peter Van Heerden In Ubuntu". Baltimore News and Announcements. American Towns. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  5. ^ "erf81 Cultural Collective". Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  6. ^ McCabe, Bret. "Peter Van Heerden: A Q&A with the South African performance artist". City Paper. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  7. ^ a b Verga, Francesca. "Peter van Heerden at the KZNSA". Retrieved 19 April 2012.