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Inside the Artists Studio: Jan-Henri Booyens


December 3rd, 2010 by Georgia Kotretsos

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Jan-Henri Booyens at his studio, in Pretoria, South Africa

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Jan-Henri Booyens is a South African artist based in Pretoria, South Africa. Jan holds a BFA in painting from the Durban Institute of Technology, in KwaZulu Natal. Since 2000, he has widely exhibited nationally as well as internationally. His work may be found at numerous collections but the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art in Paris is the one that stands out. He is currently represented by WHATIFTHEWORLD Gallery in Cape Town and he is a member of the visual art collective, Avant Car Guard. I am presenting Jan today because his work reflects the sensation, as he put it, of being a South African. His textures, pallet, forms, and chaos are there to serve the edginess of a reality he naturally discusses in the interview later on. His works read as the artists very signature, as a fingerprint a generous portion of his visual intake is mirrored on his surfaces and I recognize him and his world in paint clearer than by anyone else among his generation of artists. Jans work has myriad layers, yet the one that conceptually excites me the most is his take on Modernism and his guts to experiment with and stretch this dogma as if its gum between his fingertips. It takes intelligence and informed decisions to initiate a dialogue with a tradition from the past and further successfully produce contemporary paintings today by using a supposedly exhausted vernacular.

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "Stoned," 170 x 200 cm, 2010

Contemporary Practice (21) > Alchemy of Inspiration (5) > Art 2.1: Creating on the Social Web (16) > Bedfellows: Art and Visual Culture (15) > BOMB in the Building (19) > Bound: The Printed Object in

The minute he held up Stoned at the depot of his gallery at the Johannesburg Art Fair last April, I stood there instinctively connecting the dots. Images and texts of Abstract Expressionist painting were flashing before my eyes it was mentally a cross-art history puzzle. All the information was there, all the clues are still right there; thus, I stand by his side when he wishes he could respond by saying you figure it out! every time hes being asked about the content of his work. Jan speaks directly to a specialized audience his work is developing rapidly and with this

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Inside the Artists Studio: Jan-Henri Booyens | Art21 Blog


body of work, he is significantly contributing to the evolution of South Africa painting. It is always a pleasure to present a fellow Durban Institute of Technology alumnus. Please read on Georgia Kotretsos: What does it mean to be a contemporary artist/painter in South Africa right now? What kind of voice do artists have and why have you chosen to have two one as a painter with an independent practice and one as a member of Avant Car Guard? Jan Henri Booyens: Well it is a cutthroat business out there. Literarily I saw an artist stab a gallerist in the throat one time. Jokes aside, Im working in an ambiguous space between a history of South African art known for its political undertones and that of South African and African abstraction that is rich in mysticism, ritual, and an emotive understanding of the world. Context (6) > Cairo in Context: Art and Change in the Middle East (4) > Calling from Canada (15) > Center Field | Art in the Middle with Bad at Sports. (58) > Future Metaphors (3) > Gastro-Vision (37) > GIF(t) Basket (8) > Gimme Shelter: Performance Now (18) > Ink: Notes on the Contemporary Print (29) > Inside the Artist's Studio (40) > Inspired Reading (12) > Letter from London (92) > Lives and Works in Berlin (28) > Looking at Los Angeles (81) > New Kids on the Block (4) > No Preservatives: Conversations about Conservation (37) > On Location: Inside Art Documentary Production (9) > On View Now (32)
Jan-Henri Booyens, "Fault Lines," oil on canvas, 170 x 200 cm, 2010

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Being African is not an understanding but rather a sensation. South Africa is a volatile space; I get exposed to so much violence, chaos and fear on a day-to-day basis, yet it remains secondary to how beautiful this country/place is. Beautiful is such a weak word for the feeling Im trying to articulate. What Im getting at is that natural beauty, nature, land and place are the main themes in my work.

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "Bloed Straat," oil on canvas, 170 x 200 cm, 2010

Nature is violent, yet peaceful. Nature is chaos, yet mathematically ordered. These ambiguities, polarities perhaps, also exist in me and in my work. They inform my language. I wouldnt be able to be an artist in any other place. The world I live in, the world as I see it, is quite messy and chaotic.

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Inside the Artists Studio: Jan-Henri Booyens | Art21 Blog

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What influences art? (47) What is the value of art? (83) What's so shocking about contemporary art? (40) > Video: (528) Classroom (15) Conversation (8) Excerpt (35) Exclusive (186) New York Close Up (62) Reblog (198) Spoof (6) Uncut (4) Access '12 (1) Art21 Access '09 (25)
Jan-Henri Booyens, "Untitled," oil on canvas, 120 x 100 cm, 2010

May 2010 April 2010 March 2010 February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007

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The works I make are the result of applying my logic and life experience to the canvas or whatever else is in front of me. Thats my work. It is what it is for better or for worse. Being a contemporary artist/painter in South Africa right now can mean a lot of things but I can only talk for myself. I care about making paintings and I do what comes naturally. I also do drawings, video, photography, printmaking, and installation work. Color and shapes are my alphabet. I can spend hours mixing hues. I want the paint to jump from its surface even if the painting is devoid of bright color. The only color I use directly from the tube is white. I use a lot of white in my paintings to erase, deny, or hide the information of the work.

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Jan Henri Booyens, "Mornings Are the Worst," oil on canvas, 120 x 100 cm, 2009

I must admit that I find myself in a bit of a predicament. One of the reasons I created this abstract language is that I did not want to tell the viewer what he or she should read. I grew tired of South African art dictating the message to viewers. But I still wanted to tell my story without the viewer knowing what the story is. I want the viewer to create her or his own story and relationship with the work. Now, more and more journalists or students writing theses ask me: So what is the work about? What is the message? What is the concept? What is the meaning?

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "Tectonic" solo exhibition at WHATIFTHEWORLD Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa, 2010

All I want to say is: fuck you, you figure it out. But that doesnt seem to work. It seems that if you want to make it as an artist in South Africa or elsewhere, you have to force-feed the audience with a golden information spoon and kiss a lot of ASS. When you dont want to play the game in the way that everybody expects you to, in the way that they feel they also have to, then you tend to get pigeon-holed as either stupid, arrogant, or lazy. I dont mind being called any of those things right now.

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Inside the Artists Studio: Jan-Henri Booyens | Art21 Blog

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "Let My Loneliness Burn," oil and spray on canvas, 100 x 120 cm, 2008

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Collectors in South Africa rarely think for themselves and they need a reason and meaning attached like a little tail to their wallets; otherwise they dont invest in you. SA contemporary art remains under-valued and under-collected internationally. Locally, it suffers from being subject to a very limited buying market. Historically, SA contemporary art has never performed well because the work has always been so far behind that of Europe or America. It is only now that we are beginning to close the gap and still most SA art remains peripheral. Im sorry if Im starting to sound a bit bitter. It could be that my previous painting show in Cape Town in April did not sell, even though it got an amazing review by Lloyd Pollak on the popular South African art website, Artthrob. I have noticed that most of the people that do buy my work are either from Europe or the US. This could be because there is a history and greater appreciation, understanding, and education in the language of abstract art.

Jan-Henri Booyens, "Joburg," oil on canvas, 170 x 200 cm, 2008

AVANT CAR GUARD also comes naturally. We are three good friend who are all practicing artists. AVANT CAR GUARD just kind of happens when we get together. Working as a group is great. It can get lonely all on your own in your little studio stuck with your own little ideas. Having another place to go to, to spend time with friends, and to work on ideas separate from my solo work is a real blessing. The name AVANT CAR GUARD brings together the term Avant Garde with the South African phenomenon of a car guard. A car guard is someone who looks after your car while you are parked in public for a nominal fee.

Avant Car Guard, Volume III

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GK: Some would argue that the South African art bubble has already burst could this be true? I am creatively and personally invested in it for many different reasons, which makes it harder to tell. Yet, out of all the art fairs Ive visited in 2010, the Johannesburg Art Fair last April as intimate as it was, and as visually shocking at first due to the enormous out-of-time/out-ofplace central installation it was the fair that added the most names to my list of artists I should to talk to. Ive seen burst bubbles and they dont look like that. What are your thoughts on such projections?

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "Shutter Speed," oil on canvas, 55 x 55 cm, 2008

JHB: Arguing that the SA art bubble has already burst would make anyone look like an idiot. NO! Theres always a bubble somewhere. Its just a pity that there hasnt been a bubble in the quality of SA art criticism after Ivor Powell. GK: Is there a day job that supports your practice? And are there any short-term or long-term creative plans? JHB: Yes, I am teaching all the grades from grade 8 to 12, but got really pissed off with the Department of Educations traditionalist, closed-minded views on what is constituted as art education. This included the syllabus and the marking of the final year (grade 12) artworks. So I quit teaching at the end of 2008 to focus on my art for a year. At the beginning of 2010, I started teaching again but this time only for grade 8 and 9. This experience has been great because I taught art and culture in all the disciplines art, music, dance, and drama. This gave me more freedom to develop fun projects, where the kids could engage and experiment, get their hands dirty and open their minds. One project stands out: I asked the students to take a traditional African folklore, to write a script and then create and perform a shadow puppet play. It was a lot of fun for me and the students. It is a very rewarding job.

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "RDP," oil on canvas, 170 x 200 cm, 2008

Im not teaching next year because I received funding from the Swiss Arts Council, Prohelvetia, for a three-month studio program in Basel at the iaab-Ateliers. My project is entitled Shifting Land Mass. The premise will be about the instability and fragile nature of the state of our planet. I will be producing large-scale paintings and using whatever medium comes to mind at the time.

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Jan-Henri Booyens, "The Center of The World," oil on canvas, 150 x 200 cm, 2008

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If the funds permit Im planning some short films a medium that is inspiring me at the moment. As we speak, Im printing etchings and linocuts for a show at Trent Gallery, also known as Cameo Framers, in Pretoria. The show will be called Geen Piekniek which, translated from Afrikaans, No Picnic. GK: Give us a sense of your working space in a few words, please. JHB: Think of the state of my studio like so: there is not a surface (this includes the two couches, bed, large and small tables, the kitchen/bar counter, and fridge) that is not covered with inked plates, solvents, paint tubes, more ink, newsprint, paper, spray-paint cans, brushes, glass jars, and yet more paper.

Jan-Henri Booyens, "Black Pool," oil on canvas, 70 x 100 cm, 2008

Paintings are stacked against the walls, photographic references and books lie on the floor, dirty ashtrays, coffee mugs, empty beer and booze bottles still stand around from Saturday night when I had some friends over. The printing press rests on an old stainless steel butchers table, looking like a relic out of the industrial age or a prop in a B-grade horror film. The areas on the cement floor that are exposed are stained with a variety of colored paint drips and splashes. Framed paintings and drawings are nailed to the walls, giving the space some civility. Open boxes and crates with wires, paint tubes, books, and magazines in them spill out of the shelves underneath the kitchen/bar counter. A sad acoustic guitar and broken skateboard lean against cardboard tubes and rolled up sheets of paper. Lets not forget, Im also here. making pictures.

Jan Henri Booyens at his studio, in Pretoria, South Africa

And, thats a wrap!


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Posted in: > Inside the Artist's Studio, Interviews, Painting, South Africa Similar posts: Inside the Artists Studio: Siemon Allen , Alfredo Jaar: Politics of the Image , New guest blogger: Georgia Kotretsos , Teaching with William Kentridge , Inside the Artists Studio |Storm Janse van Rensburg Comments (2)

2 Responses to Inside the Artists Studio: Jan-Henri Booyens Dale on January 20, 2011 2:21 pm Meaning in art, is a democratic multiparty dynamic in that the artist may mean something (each piece of art is charged with agency) but equally as valid is what the viewer brings to it, what the theme is, what the materials are that create the work, the technique used to achieve the desired (or unintentional) effect, all of these are layers in the work itself. Technical efficiency is mere craft, art while always incorporating craft goes beyond that. A bubble in the SA art market? Any art produced cannot at least in part be a reflection of where it is created but it is also more or sometimes less than that. Jan-Henris pieces certainly are multi-leveles affairs between their representation & abstract qualities between their hard geometric figures & organic shapes they offer a cornucopia of surfaces and possibilities. Reply

Rhonda on July 4, 2012 12:10 am Fault Lines and Centre of the World are my favourites. I feel inspired to get out my paintbrish. Reply

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