resurrection

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When Carol Hofmeyr first visited Hamburg in 2000, she found a community in crisis and ravaged by HIV/AIDS. There were derelict buildings, impassable roads and 97% unemployment. The community was desperate – and devoid of hope.

Hofmeyr felt compelled to stay, determined to try to make a difference. Her first priority was to provide those suffering from HIV/AIDS, as well as their families, with whatever medical, nutritional and nurturing support she could. She occupied an abandoned building, begged and borrowed beds and bedding to create a hospice and soon became widely known as “the doctor who cares”. Patients started arriving in taxis from far-flung cities in the hope of assistance.

But, for Hofmeyr, health is not merely a function of physical well-being. People – particularly unemployed women – need the health that comes from a sense of self-worth, hope and the dignity of a job and an income. This was the genesis of the Keiskamma Art Project. Driven by social, economic and political issues, it quickly grew from a small group of women into an internationally acclaimed project employing over 100 artists and embroiderers, including two men.

‘Resurrection’ is a tribute to the founder of Keiskamma Art Project: a person whose deep humanity, hope and humility underlies the generative nature of the artmaking. The artworks themselves are testimony to the power of the creative imagination: not only as a form of healing, but as a way of envisioning a harmonious new earth.