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☞ PiB Guide Nº60 MAY/JUNE 2025

Solo Exhibition

»Zanele Muholi«

Curated by Natasha Ginwala (associate Curator, Gropius Bau),
Yasufumi Nakamori (Senior Curator International Art (Photography), Tate Modern)
and Sarah Allen (former Assistant Curator, Tate Modern)

This November, Gropius Bau opens the first major survey in Germany of South African visual activist Zanele Muholi. Muholi came to prominence in the early 2000s with photographs that tell stories of black lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer and intersex lives in South Africa and beyond. Presenting the full breadth of Muholi’s career, the Gropius Bau survey brings together over 200 photographs: from their very first body of work, Only Half the Picture, to their on-going series Somnyama Ngonyama. Addressing sexual politics, racial violence, communal resistance and self-assertion, Muholi’s work depicts individuals bravely and joyously living in the face of prejudice and intolerance. At once a gesture of visibility, empowerment and social activism, Muholi’s photography challenges dominant stereotypes and the heteronormative gaze while speaking to various forms of social, communal and artistic self-empowerment.

During the 1990s, South Africa underwent major social and political change. The country’s 1996 post-apartheid constitution was the first in the world to outlaw discrimination based on sexual orientation; yet, today, the LGBTQIA+ community continues to experience widespread violence and persecution. In their early series Only Half the Picture, Muholi captures the complexity of experiences within the queer community: moments of love and intimacy are placed alongside images that allude to intense, traumatic events in the lives of the participants. Through photographs as well as additional documentation, the exhibition highlights Muholi’s vital role as an activist-organiser engaged in collective action and media advocacy, inspiring younger generations along a path of resistance and persistence.

Stephanie Rosenthal, Director of the Gropius Bau, says:

Muholi’s work is an important part of the Gropius Bau’s programming grounded in expressions of healing and care, diverse artistic communities and socio-political change. Their work shows how healing, empathy and empowerment can persist despite collective trauma, and how photography can be a means for repair and activism alike. Amid the backdrop of post-apartheid change and continued discrimination against the LGBTQIA+ community, Muholi celebrates an intersectional Blackness in the lives of gender non-conforming individuals.”

Zanele Muholi, LiZa III, 2009 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Aftermath, 2004 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, ZaVA IV Bordeaux, 2013 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Mellisa Mbambo, Durban South Beach, 2017 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg/Amsterdam and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Bona, Charlottesville, 2015 © Zanele Muholi, Purchased with funds provided by the Africa Acquisitions Committee 2017
Zanele Muholi, Busi Sigasa, Braamfontein, Johannesburg, 2006 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Bester V, Mayotte, 2015 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg/Amsterdam and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Yaya Mavundla, Parktown, Johannesburg, 2014 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Zol, 2002 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York
Zanele Muholi, Ntozakhe II, Parktown, 2016 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York

One keystone of the exhibition is Muholi’s visual archive of portraits, Faces and Phases, a major work which commemorates and celebrates black lesbians, transgender people and gender non-conforming individuals. Each participant looks directly at the camera, challenging the viewer to hold their gaze, while individual testimonies capture stories and memorialize those who have passed away. Over 500 images and testimonies form a living and growing archive of this community in South Africa and further afield.

The exhibition includes several other key series: Brave Beauties celebrates empowered non-binary people and trans women, many of whom have won Miss Gay Beauty pageants. Being is a set of tender images of couples which affirms same-sex love, while challenging prevailing stereotypes and taboos. Photographs such as Melissa Mbambo, Durban likewise attempt to reclaim public spaces for black and queer communities, such as a beach in Durban that was racially segregated during apartheid. Within each of these series, Muholi tells collective as well as individual stories of shared triumphs, kinship and mourning. The images challenge preconceived notions of deviance and victimhood, encouraging viewers to address their own misconceptions and creating a shared sense of understanding and solidarity.

In 2012, Muholi began their acclaimed series of dramatic self-portraits entitledSomnyama Ngonyama (‘Hail the Dark Lioness’ in isiZulu) where the artist adopts different poses, characters and archetypes to address issues of race and representation. From scouring pads and latex gloves to rubber tires and cable ties, everyday materials are transformed into politically loaded props and costumes. The resulting images explore themes of labour, racism, Eurocentrism and sexual politics, often commenting on events in South Africa’s history and Muholi’s experiences as a South African black queer person traveling abroad. By enhancing the contrast in the photographs, Muholi also emphasises their skin tone, reclaiming their blackness with pride and re-asserting its beauty while also speaking to race-based stigmas, paradoxes of invisibility and hypervisibility.

This survey of Zanele Muholi continues the Gropius Bau’s history of staging exhibitions by significant 20th century and contemporary photographers, including Akinbode Akinbiyi in 2020; Lee Miller, Berenice Abbott, Robert Doisneau, and Thomas Struth in 2016; and Diane Arbus in 2012.

Zanele Muholi is curated by Natasha Ginwala (associate Curator, Gropius Bau), Yasufumi Nakamori (Senior Curator International Art (Photography), Tate Modern) and Sarah Allen (former Assistant Curator, Tate Modern). The exhibition is organised by Tate Modern, London, in collaboration with Gropius Bau, Berlin; the Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris; Institut Valencià d’Art Modern, and Bildmuseet at Umeå University. It is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue by Tate Publishing and a public programme of talks, music, and events supported by the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation.

Framework program

The public programme »Forms of Insistence, Tenderness and Refuge« accompanies the survey exhibition of Zanele Muholi at the Gropius Bau. It includes conversations, movie screenings, special tours and a poetry convening held from November 2021 until March 2022.
View programme

Sunday, Nov 28, 2021, 4:30 pm
Movie Screening and Discussion (en/de): 
AB HEUTE – Der lange Weg zum eigenen Namen
Details

Saturday, Nov 27, 2021, 5:30 pm
Talk: In Conversation with Dr. Emilia Roig (en)
Details

Gropius Bau

Nov 26, 2021 — Mar 13, 2022
Opening Day: Thursday, Nov 25, 1 – 10 pm
(free admission, first come / first served, the 2G rule applies)

Niederkirchnerstraße 7, 10963 Berlin
[District: Kreuzberg | Borough: Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg]

Opening hours: Wed – Mon 10 am – 7 pm, Tue closed

Admission: 15 € / reduced 10 € | Online Ticket

The exhibition »Zanele Muholi« at Gropius Bau is featured on the cover of the PiB Guide Nº39 NOV/DEC 2021, PiB’s bi-monthly exhibition guide for Berlin’s versatile photography scene. Order your copy today in PiB’s shop and discover further highlights!

PiB Guide Nº39 NOV/DEC 2021 © PiB Photography in Berlin. COVER PHOTO: Zanele Muholi, Bester V, Mayotte, 2015 © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg/Amsterdam and Yancey Richardson, New York. Solo exhibition at Gropius Bau in Berlin-Kreuzberg +++ Photos on right double spread, from top left to bottom right: 1) Zanele Muholi, ZaVA IV Bordeaux, 2013; 2) Zanele Muholi, Mellisa Mbambo, Durban South Beach, 2017; 3) Zanele Muholi, Zol, 2002; 1+2+3) © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy of the Artist and Stevenson, Cape Town/Johannesburg/Amsterdam and Yancey Richardson, New York; 4) Zanele Muholi, Bona, Charlottesville, 2015 © Zanele Muholi, Purchased with funds provided by the Africa Acquisitions Committee 2017 +++ Photos on second right double spread, partly visible: all images © Ron Jude, Courtesy Robert Morat Galerie +++ PiB Guide Editor / V.i.S.d.P. / Art Direction: Julia Schiller @julia.schiller_ · ele studio berlin · www.ele-studio.de +++ Printed on 100% recycling paper in Berlin-Köpenick by altmann-druck, many thanks!

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PiB Guide Nº59 MAR/APR 2025 © PiB ⸺ Photography in Berlin. COVER PHOTO · TITELBILD PiB Guide Nº59: Simon Lehner, Balance study with boy, 2018. From the series »How far is a lightyear?«, 2005–2019. Pigment print, 90 × 72 cm. Courtesy KOW Berlin © Simon Lehner. Part of EMOP Berlin's main festival exhibition »what stands between us« at Akademie der Künste in Berlin-Hansaviertel, read more on page 4 & 5! +++ 6 photos on right double page spread (p. 5), top left to bottom right: 1) Johanna Maria Fritz: o.T., 2022, aus der Serie "Ein afghanischer Teppich", 2022. 2) Bérangère Fromont, aus der Serie "Except the Clouds", 2018. 3) Inga Ivanova: Family Kassi 1965, aus der Serie "TANOE: Echos der Wurzeln", 1965 Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, Color Printing Process RA-4 4 Kamila K Stanley: Avellar, Archivalischer Tintenstrahldruck. 5) Rosalind Lowry: Endangered Species List 481, 2023, Pigment-Print (Installationsansicht; Leinen, Farbe), 78 x 58 cm. 6) Lisa Wassmann: Sebiana Venice, Florida, 2024, aus der Serie "Somewhere Else", 2007-2024, Courtesy Lisa Wassmann.

PiB Guide Nº59 MAR/APR 2025 © PiB ⸺ Photography in Berlin. COVER · TITELBILD: Simon Lehner, Balance study with boy, 2018. From the series »How far is a lightyear?«, 2005–2019. Pigment print, 90 × 72 cm. Courtesy KOW Berlin © Simon Lehner. Part of EMOP Berlin’s main festival exhibition »what stands between us« at Akademie der Künste am Hanseatenweg in Berlin-Hansaviertel, read more on page 4 & 5! +++ 6 photos on right double page spread (p. 5), top left to bottom right: 1) © Johanna-Maria Fritz: o.T., 2022, aus der Serie “Ein afghanischer Teppich”, 2022. 2) © Bérangère Fromont, aus der Serie “Except the Clouds”, 2018. 3) © Inga Ivanova: Family Kassi 1965, aus der Serie “TANOE: Echos der Wurzeln”, 1965 Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, Color Printing Process RA-4. 4) © Kamila K Stanley: Avellar, Archivalischer Tintenstrahldruck. 5) © Rosalind Lowry: Endangered Species List 481, 2023, Pigment-Print (Installationsansicht; Leinen, Farbe), 78 x 58 cm. 6) © Lisa Wassmann: Sebiana Venice, Florida, 2024, aus der Serie “Somewhere Else”, 2007-2024, Courtesy Lisa Wassmann. +++ PiB Guide Editors / V.i.S.d.P. / Art Direction: Julia Schiller & Oliver Schneider

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PiB Guide Nº59
MAR/APR 2025

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PiB Guide Nº59
MAR/APR 2025

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Entdecke großartige Fotoausstellungen in Berlin & darüberhinaus in PiBs zweimonatlicher Printausgabe, dem PiB Guide! Die aktuelle Ausgabe ist erschienen als Booklet im DIN A6 Format · 52 Seiten · Deutsch & Englisch · weltweiter Versand.

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»PiB — Photography in Berlin« | PiB’s website, PiB’s weekly E-Newsletter, and the bi-monthly published PiB Guide: page 12 & 13 from the PiB Guide Nº15 Nov/Dec 2017; feat. the exhibition Evelyn Hofer »Cities, Interiors, Still Lifes. Photographs 1962 – 1997« at Galerie Springer Berlin; image credits: Queensboro Bridge, New York, 1964 / Coney Island, New York, 1965 / Girl with Bicycle, Dublin, 1966, all 3 photos © Evelyn Hofer, Estate Evelyn Hofer.
»PiB — Photography in Berlin« | PiB’s website, PiB’s weekly E-Newsletter, and the bi-monthly published PiB Guide: page 12 & 13 from the PiB Guide Nº15 Nov/Dec 2017; feat. the exhibition Evelyn Hofer »Cities, Interiors, Still Lifes. Photographs 1962 – 1997« at Galerie Springer Berlin; image credits: Queensboro Bridge, New York, 1964 / Coney Island, New York, 1965 / Girl with Bicycle, Dublin, 1966, all 3 photos © Evelyn Hofer, Estate Evelyn Hofer.

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