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Drinking from Our Own Wells Endarkened Feminist Epistemology as Praxis in a Persistent Economy of Lack

 
Speculative Inquiry #1 (On Abstraction), curated by Nkule Mabaso.

Installation view: Speculative Inquiry #1 (On Abstraction), curated by Nkule Mabaso. Photo: Cassandra Jacobs. Courtesy of Michaelis Galleries, University of Cape Town.

The basis of this presentation will draw from a current project which Nontobeko Ntombela and I are currently working on, provisionally titled The Painterly Tradition and Black Women. The project stems from Nontobeko's long-term research into feminist positions in contemporary South African art, as exemplified through her research on the historical positions of Gladys Mgudlandlu and Valerie Desmore,1 and my own projects which set out to complicate and trouble the persistent absence of black women artists. Together we endeavour to produce intergenerational research into black (understood in the broad term as per Steve Biko) female artists in South Africa, in order to articulate other frameworks as well as reconfigure the concepts and spaces which continue to support exclusion. Here, I will engage our knowledge focuses and how these inform our 'theorising' and doing as black African women. Our positionality is prompted by feminist and postcolonial revisions of knowledge production which raise questions concerning black women's history and its representation, primarily in the aesthetic and experimental ways of the expanded field of artistic practice.