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    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mary Sibande, Good is bad and bad is good, 2020

    Mary Sibande South Africa, b. 1982

    Good is bad and bad is good, 2020
    Painted Bronze
    26 3/4 x 13 3/8 x 13 3/8 in
    68 x 34 x 34 cm
    Edition of 6 plus 2 AP
    7459

    Further images

    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 4 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 5 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 6 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 7 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 8 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    • (View a larger image of thumbnail 9 ) Mary Sibande, Turn, Turn, Turn, Turn, 2019
    Here we see Sophie, Mary Sibande's avatar, in her red phase, representative of many things, but especially blood and anger. Color is fundamental aspect of Sibande's practice. She was born...
    Read more
    Here we see Sophie, Mary Sibande's avatar, in her red phase, representative of many things, but especially blood and anger. Color is fundamental aspect of Sibande's practice. She was born Black in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1982— part of the majority, yet oppressed by the institutionally white supremacist Apartheid system, which granted minority whites supreme political control. Sibande’s mother was a domestic worker—her uniform a standard, blue dress with white, lace apron and head scarf. Her father, dressed in green fatigues, served in the South African Army. When she was just seven years old, Sibande watched as the police turned water cannons filled with purple dye onto anti-apartheid protestors days before national elections. The purple dye was intended to make protesters easier to arrest, and indeed hundreds were rounded up and jailed, yet protestors commandeered one of the cannons and turned it on the governing party’s legislative offices. After the riot, graffiti around the city foretold, “The purple shall govern.” Six years later, Apartheid would officially end, but still today racial inequity is rampant in South Africa. Sibande expresses the frustration of contemporary Black South Africans with the color red, a choice stemming from the Zulu aphorism, “ie ukwatile uphenduke inja ebomvu,” meaning “he is angry, he turned into a red dog.”

    Sibande employs the human form as a vehicle through photography and sculpture as a focused critique on the stereotypical depictions of women, particularly black women in South Africa. The body, for Sibande, and particularly how we clothe it, is the site where this history is contested and where Sibande’s own fantasies can play out. This counter history takes the form of an alter-ego in Sibande’s early work, a persona by the name of ‘Sophie’ who is dressed in various uniforms that resemble the dresses worn by domestic workers. Altering these dress styles into Victorian motifs, Sibande completely reanimates Sophie’s history through how her body is adorned and the way she occupies these narratives that were stolen and denied from her. Transitioning from blue to green to purple to red, Sibande introduces us not only to the many faces of herself and ‘Sophie’, but to the complex person hoods of African Women who continue to create worlds and narratives outside of the canon of Western Imperialism.

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