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Faces & Phases
Zanele Muholi
Artwork 2006–ongoing
A photograph shows a monochrome litho poster with a grid of photographic portraits from Zanele Muholi's 'Faces & phases' project on a black table.
Artwork: Zanele Muholi, Faces & Phases (2006–ongoing). Black-and-white lithographic poster. Courtesy of the artist and Stevenson.
Artist Zanele Muholi Title Faces & Phases Date 2006–ongoing Materials Black-and-white lithographic poster Credit Courtesy of the artist and Stevenson

b.1972, Umlazi

“My practice as a visual activist,” Zanele Muholi writes, “looks at black resistance – at existence as well as insistence.” Muholi’s photographic projects address the absence in the image archive of black, queer South Africa, which is all but rendered invisible in national histories. Addressing personal experiences, contemporary politics, and social exclusions, their photographs offer an alternative representation of blackness in a country where homosexuality – while legal – is more often deemed ‘un-African’. As a result, South Africa’s black LGBTQIA community suffers not only prejudice and intolerance within their communities, but violent hate crimes. Muholi’s photographic projects respond to such prejudice and that of racism, with the archival act of documenting queer and non-gender conforming individuals in intimate portraits. It is, the activist suggests, a restorative gesture, “marking, mapping, and preserving an often invisible community for prosperity.” Muholi is perhaps best known for Faces and Phases (2006–2011), a series of over two hundred black-and-white photographs of lesbian women – women who exist and persist in a society hostile to their very presence.

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