Strauss & co - 17 February 2018, Cape Town
Pierneef represented everything reprehensible of the old apartheid regime for Barker. According to him, Pierneef’s monumental landscapes represented the newfound land of the Afrikaner nation. They saw themselves, not only as superior, but also as a “chosen people’ in a “promised land’ . Barker goes on to say that he “recreated the paintings as almost perfect pastiches of the originals commissioned by the government for exhibition at the main railway station in Johannesburg: “I then created an intervention on the surface of these pastiches using found objects that deconstructed these images and questioned the appropriation of land, exploitation of labour and notions of culture in transit. As I understood it, Pierneef was a kind of propagandist for the white view of South Africa. He belonged to a ruling class and invented South Africa for that class. I try in my work to pull that vision apart by bringing in other possibilities.’ 1 Barker’s Pierneef’s, according to John Peffer,“do not remove the hatred symbols of the old order. They are kept around, roughened up a bit and cast in a new mould. Or perhaps the faults in the mould are what are revealed through overpainting, and the faulty mould is what we are left with? Here destruction is in the service of re-creation, and in this case of re-inclusion, by means of scratching over, what is censored out iconographically, aesthetically from pictures of the South African countryside’ . 2 Andrew Lamprecht goes one step further when he maintains that Barker’s Pierneef- backgrounds “became ubiquitous wallpaper, a necessary point of reference in his art. His images are contingent, dependent on this background, without which they’d be vacuous”. 3 In his defacement of Pierneef, Barker was an early harbinger of the healing processes a fledgling South African democracy had to undergo in a contemporary world. 1. John Peffer. (2009) Art at the End of Apartheid . University of Minnesota press. Page 227. 2. Ibid, page 228. 3. Andrew Lamprecht, 2010,“Populating Pierneef’. In: Wayne Barker: Super Boring . SMAC and Standard Bank Gallery, page 60.
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