art and the body

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After moving to Hamburg in 2000, medical doctor, humanitarian and fine artist Carol Hofmeyr became aware of the extreme economic and emotional hardship experienced by this small Eastern Cape community, through disproportionate losses to HIV/AIDS. Many children had become orphans after losing both parents to the disease and were cared for by grandmothers who struggled to make ends meet. Hofmeyr introduced embroidery to a small group of women as a form of creative healing, as well as a way to make a living. At the same time she implemented urgent strategies and partnerships to address issues of indigence and lack of access to adequate health services. In 2002 the Keiskamma Trust was formally established as a community health and development NGO, incorporating the Keiskamma Art Project as part of the larger framework. It is significant that the catalyst for the establishment of a broader community programme was artmaking. The art pieces, expressions of humanity and hope amid desperation, have always been direct responses to the challenging health and social issues faced by the community.

After two decades of artmaking, in 2020 the Hamburg community was affected by yet another major global pandemic, bringing back painful memories of the years when HIV/AIDS was destroying the fabric of the community. Unable to gather in the studio as a collective during the Covid-19 lockdown, the artists took small pieces of cloth home and worked on individual embroideries that expressed how they coped with isolation, illness and the loss of friends and loved ones. When lockdown ended, these individual works were sewn together into one artwork celebrating the possibility of life returning to normal and showing the profound importance of art as a way of sharing experiences and fostering a sense of hope, community and joy. The artwork conveys the ongoing interplay of health and sickness, life and death, despair and hope in a community that has experienced extended periods of illness and adversity, and found ways to navigate through it.

Remarkably, the Project straddles two global pandemics: the HIV/AIDS pandemic that was ravaging rural communities in South Africa when the Project started, and the Covid-19 pandemic twenty years on. The artists reveal both the devastating losses suffered by the Hamburg community and its extraordinary resilience through two major humanitarian crises.

Artworks for this theme:

Keiskamma Altarpiece
Keiskamma Guernica
Marriage
Rose Altarpiece
Covid Resilience Tapestry