Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami write-ups for “Intersectionality”

Anja Marais Art Anja Marais Art

“On Their Shoulders” 2016, Photomontage Mixed Media and Found Objects. 72 in x 48 in x 28 in

My  work got mentioned in the press for the “Intersectionality” exhibition curated by Richard Haden:

By Phillip Valys from SouthFlorida.com

….The piece calls to mind old-world colonialism and immigration, which is echoed in Anja Marais’ installation “The Crossing,” where nine pairs of adult and children’s dress shoes filled with dirt sit next to an out-of-focus photograph of a muddy cornfield.

Although Marais emigrated from South Africa during apartheid, the shoes evoke the current Syrian refugee crisis, Haden says.

“When migrants are being forced out of their country to escape oppression, they have to pack your belongings hastily. You leave with the shoes on your feet,” Haden says. “It’s a dehumanizing process, these journeys from one world to another.”

Read full article [HERE].


By Anne Tschida for Miami Herald

Two installations leave a searing impression. One is a large photograph of a fallow field; in front of it are shoes — some of them lovely dress shoes — filled with dirt. Artist Anja Marais, an immigrant from South Africa, created the work in reference to the plight of Syrian refugees, who have fled with the shoes they wore on whatever day they ran, tripping through muddy fields in high heels. Adjacent is a sculpture of tattered furniture bundled together, left behind as the journey became more treacherous. Migrants are in a perpetual process of losing and reforming identities.

Read full article [HERE].
The exhibition is open until August 14th 2016

 

By |2017-07-11T00:09:17-04:00August 5th, 2016|

Annual Open Studio 2016

Anja Marais cordially invites you to an art viewing at her studio. Viewing includes her newest works. Art studios by neighbor artists will also be open to the public: Babette Hershberger, Kerry Phillips, Christian Bernard, Olivier Dubois-Cherrier and Ana Carballosa.

SAT, MAY 14th, 11AM – 4PM

anja marais studio

By |2017-07-12T12:51:04-04:00May 10th, 2016|

Famished Road at the Deering Estate

Famished Road at the Deering Estate by Anja Marais

The Famished Road ‘  is an installation created for the exhibition “Intersections” that will open in  Miami at the Deering Estate on

SATURDAY, APRIL 16th, 3:30 – 10:00 pm

The Famished Road‘ Speaks of the displaced and the current refugee crisis of our world. Those that live in a state of makeshift between borders seeking shelter not just from the elements but from the shadows of humanity.

Mixed Media, found objects and Photo montage – 2016 – 8′ x  15′ x 15′

Exhibition ends June 6th, 2016

Famished Road at the Deering Estate by Anja Marais

By |2017-07-11T00:08:17-04:00April 13th, 2016|

Stages of the Denizen

February 3rd – March 1st
Artist Lecture: Wednesday, February 3rd from 3 – 4 pm, CBS Auditorium
A reception will be held immediately following the lecture.
University of the Arts
Sculpture Gallery / Hamilton Hall Lower Level
320 S Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19102

Stages of the Denizen and Exhibition by Anja Marais

Up flight of the Wingless Bird, 2015, 85″ x 79″, Photomontage, ink on recycled fabric

By |2017-07-11T00:08:17-04:00January 31st, 2016|

Notes from my Vermont Studio Center Residency

marais_suitcase_art

I have recently returned from a month-long art residency in Johnson Vermont. One of the largest art residencies in the country that housed up to 50 artists and writers a month. Some of my random notes and observances from my journal I kept there:

1.

Sitting next to a brook, the sun out and the mountains defined. The rain has temporarily dissipated. I can see as far back as I can see ahead. The water at my feet, a conveyor belt of fluid glass, moving towards the ocean. I myself a stream joining other trickling brooks to roar together to the unknown sea. To be part of the ocean again, the home we all came from. Surrounded by many artists (over fifty of them), each a fingerprint, I can see the hand.

2.

Most artists work is directly or indirectly, consciously or unconsciously about their childhood.

3.

The poet Olena Kalytiak Davis asked: ” Do you create to impress or do you create to engage?”, while she absent-mindedly tucks on the top button of her blouse. Reading Keats, she tucks and tucks.

4.

The river spoke to me, a one-sided conversation. The blind woman taught me that I do not see, I do not listen, as she played sweet tunes to the water on her wooden recorder. I remembered that I can speak back and I apologized for my verbal absence. The river forgave me as she gurgled ” Never be mute, never be blind”

5.

The river further said: “Like me, carry fuel, draw water because you should offer the viewer of your art living water”

6.

A caveat: Silence, the kind you hear at night in the middle of the forest, in the back of the library, or face underwater in your bathtub. No more air in my lungs, no more gelatine in my joints. Because I asked the wrong questions, everything was contaminated. I got silence. Questions that tarred my decisions, dulled my output, feathered my impact. Don’t you know by now that art cannot redeem the world? Don’t you know that your questions are too small? Asking for acceptance is verbal cancer.

7.

Think back when you were a child, you saw the world as a non-duality, you viewed it with no connections.  That envelope of time before racism, apartheid, bigotry, terrorism, exclusiveness, for it bore no name.

8.

Some artists have nothing to say. Some artists built scaffolding around their work to appear that they are saying something. Some artists work speaks because it has unvoiced flames, rapids and to-be-burst clouds.

9.

To be older than fire, to be older than the sea, you the “i” needs to die.

10.

An artist passing by said that if art is not funny, he is not interested. Are we clowns or are we messengers? Are you the jester or are you the healer? Amusing ourselves to death, we are laughing as the tides are rising.

11.

Before society pressed us through the meat minder into perfect little meatballs, we were the cow. We were the grass inside the cow. We were the milk inside the udder, the air in the lungs. The same air that blankets the planet. The same planet that is a warm pocket in a universe. The same universe peppered with particles, gas and radiation. The time before “i”, before the meatball was baptized as “i”.

12.

I love poets, artists, and dreamers. They give me hope, they give me solace. They show me, as Ben Okri said, the falseness of our limitations and the true extent of our kingdom.

By |2017-07-12T12:51:05-04:00December 9th, 2015|
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