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The Electronic Revolution
Kendell Geers
Artwork 2004
Artwork: Kendell Geers, The Electronic Revolution (2004). Collaboration with Merzbow. Felt slipmat. Edition of 100, 4 different versions. 25 copies of each design (+ 8AP of each). This copy is not signed. 30 cm (diameter). Courtesy of the artist. Image courtesy of Sebastian Voigt.
Artist Kendell Geers Title The Electronic Revolution Date 2004 Materials Collaboration with Merzbow. Felt Slipmat. Dimensions 30 cm (diameter) Edition Edition of 100, 4 different versions. 25 copies of each design (+ 8AP of each). This copy is not signed. Credit Courtesy of the artist

This artwork was loaned to the exhibition Dada South? Experimentation, Radicalism and Resistance curated by Kathryn Smith and Roger van Wyk, Iziko South Africa National Gallery, December 12, 2009–February 28, 2010. It is indexed here as part of Smith and Van Wyk’s revisiting of the Dada South? Archive of materials at A4 Arts Foundation.

b.1968, Johannesburg

“For a long time,” the writer Sophie Perryer observes, “the name Kendell Geers was inevitably preceded in the South African press by the words enfant terrible.” Nowadays, however, Geers would rather his name be followed by his chosen epithet, AniMystikAKtivist. Regardless, his work remains provocative, confrontational and brash. His medium of choice is found objects, particularly those that offer a latent threat of violence, such as broken glass, barbed wire, hazard tape and sirens. The Terrorist’s Apprentice (2002) is a notable example of the conceptual clarity and material minimalism of Geers’ practice (the work consists of only a single safety match). Unconcerned with social niceties, the artist challenges structures of power and value – from religion to politics – with dark, sardonic humour and irreverence. “Art,” he says, “is the only legal form of moral transgression.” Then: “If you want to destroy something, make it a fashion." A word of advice, a warning. 

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