KEITH DIETRICH
Prof Keith Dietrich is currently the
head of the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Stellenbosch. Alongside his career
in academia since the 1970s, he has shown in over 60 group exhibitions here and
abroad, working in the general sphere of descriptive painting with a bent for
realism. According to Kim Gurney, Dietrich could be considered a kind of
artist/ explorer, with a fascination for history and research informing his
work and often triggering new ideas. Besides his teaching and creating, he has
also been actively involved in community and outreach projects.
Dietrich's interests have led him to travel widely
overseas and extensively within South Africa, Swaziland, Botswana and Namibia.
He takes a special interest in areas of artistic, historical, archaeological
and anthropological significance. Dietrich's work takes as its starting point
the banal: everyday objects and ordinary people. He extends his contemplation
into a Zen-like artistic approach that places unusual emphasis on time and
effort in creative endeavour. Through his artistic
investigations, a number of themes repeat themselves. The tension between
chance and order recurs, as does the duality between fact and fiction, reality
and appearance. His explorations often have a scientific rigour
which he employs to create works layered with multiple references and rooted in
extensive research.
Technology is a more recent fascination. Dietrich says
technology is a kind of metaphor for understanding and seeing the world:
"Our view is always mediated - we understand through glass, through lenses
and apertures." Dietrich comments upon this by intervening and mediating
his own work with technology. He builds it into the work rather than generating
images with digital technology alone.
Dietrich is also influenced by the idea of illustration,
as it straddles both Fine Art and Design. The importance of images, with their
power to inform, as a way of understanding the world, is a central motif in his
work. Dietrich says: "I like describing the world. I use mostly
watercolour because I can paint more realistically and
describe best; other mediums sit upon the surface and read as an object".
The titles of Dietrich's works are often long and obscure,
with a humorous twist. They do not describe the works but include references to
them, such as How Dr Gustav Fritsch might or might not have ordered wild and
formless worlds.
On inspiration: "The objects with which people surround
themselves have provided me with an endless source of material and ideas for
paintings. Not only can objects be used to express aspects of the thinking and
behavioural patterns of individuals or societies, but
collections of objects also reveal the range and diversity of human histories
and cultures.
"Within the dominant Western-oriented cultural
environment in South Africa, 'cultural refinement' is understood as conforming
to Western bourgeois aesthetic values and ideals to the exclusion of other cultural
or class values.
"Most of my paintings are characterised by the
depiction of objects focusing on aspects of a proletarian aesthetic as an
antitype of bourgeois aesthetic values: domestic furniture, ornaments,
consumable products, and bric-a-brac from trading stores that cater mostly for
recently urbanised and economically disadvantaged
people. My specific choice and juxtaposition of objects read as powerful
expressions which challenge the notion of 'cultural refinement' as a powerful
ideological structure."
On depicting people: "My interest in depicting people
has been largely motivated by a desire to challenge dominant Western-based
canons concerning the body beautiful. Largely informed by Classical Greek and
post-Renaissance aesthetic conventions regarding the ideal or
Adamic prototype of physiological perfection and
nineteenth-century racial ideologies, these canons are still prevalent in
Western thinking, and in particular in the advertising, fashion and beauty
industries."
On landscape: "I believe that nature is an 'idea'
created by humans and in Western thinking has been an integral part of an urban
discourse since Plato and Aristotle. As ideas of nature in Western thinking
have generally tended to be formulated from the perspective of the city or polis,
it is difficult (perhaps impossible) to separate these notions from a political
discourse.
On influences: "Apart from in the early 1980s when I
was influenced by American Photorealists, my work has
not been influenced by any artists or artworks in particular."
"With Dietrich we are in the world of
history, and specifically the world of culture in its
broadest sense. All the items depicted by Dietrich can be situated within a
cultural context. Dietrich encourages us to think of the journey as both
literal and metaphorical... The work and the responses it evokes become part of
a journey that never ends."
Joe Dolby, 'Calculated tiptoeing: A Small Miscalculation in Sir Frances
Galton's eugenics theory by Keith Dietrich', A Decade of Democracy (Double
Storey Books: 2004, Cape Town), p. 44.
"Dietrich's noses pierced with rubies are not
necessarily Indian, and his beaded, braided hairstyles are not necessarily
black. An element of peek-a-boo enters this disquisition on cultural crossover:
we itch to assign identities to the artist's sitters, but he withholds the full
picture and frustrates any such attempt."
Lloyd Pollack, 'Redefining our Notion of African Art', www.artthrob.co.za July
2003.
"Dietrich's maps are the space of the
unconsciousness, a gentleman's cabinet of curiosities, Pandora's box of
miracles and nightmares. They plot the limits of the cogita
to expose scientific deduction as irrational causality. They show us that there
will never be a one-to-one correspondence between language and the world. Like
quantum physics, they show us that the closer we get to the truth, the further
it recedes from us." Lize van Robbroeck, Introduction to 'Horizons of
Babel', artist's book, 2004.
Dietrich's show at Stellenbosch University Art Gallery
called 'Horizons of Babel' comprised 64 double-page spread maps, stretching
from Cape Columbine to Cape Agulhas, and seven panorama aquarelle paintings.
The project was framed against the background of a fascination with the
topography of the country that dominated the interests of both amateur and
professional artists from the colonial period to the present.
'Horizons of Babel' is to a large degree informed by the
concept of the disembodied panorama, and the particular relationship between
the panorama and panopticon. It also investigates
tension between the centre and the periphery. This relates to a broader concern
of Dietrich's, which extends to the impact of globalisation upon South Africa
and other countries challenging the central force of the First World.
His work was also on show at two other Western Cape
exhibitions: 'Decade of Democracy' at the SANG and '40 Years, 40 Artists' at
the Sasol Art Gallery in Stellenbosch.
Dietrich relocated from Johannesburg to Cape Town in 2000.
This move precipitated his geographical explorations that in turn resulted in
'Horizons of Babel'. Up to this point, he had spent 17 years teaching at Unisa
while also creating art.
Between 2000 and 2002, he researched an exhibition and
publication for the Anthropological Museum at the University of Zurich. For
this project, he produced a body of watercolour
fragments intended for installation at the museum.
It was based on Dietrich's responses to his journeys
between Kuruman and Lake Ngami that
centred on the trade and hunting travel routes. It also
included his responses to a series of /Xam drawings
and watercolours executed under the guidance of
linguists Wilhelm Bleek and Lucy Lloyd in the late
19th century.
From 1993 to 1997, Dietrich made a number of journeys into
the Kalahari Desert that resulted in a body of 34 works, some comprising up to
55 sections. They were informed by colonial travel literature and images. These
journeys into the desert retraced migratory and trade routes used for centuries
and also followed by European travellers and
explorers.
An important turning point in terms of pictorial space
occurred in his work in about 1996. Dietrich began to depict objects separately
on torn fragments, which relinquished his control over the fixed viewpoint.
Dietrich says: "The viewer will bring his or her own world and ideology
along as a foundation to work from and interpret along with clues and
cues."
This departure was repeated in later works like 'Bodies,
Traces, Identities', exhibited in Cape Town and Johannesburg in 2000. This is a
body of nine works, some comprising up to 63 sections, informed by contemporary
debates around the visual representation of the human body. Eventually,
Dietrich would abandon the frame format altogether.
According to Michael Stevenson, Dietrich gained prominence
as an artist during the 1980s with still-lifes and
portraits in oils, watercolour and pastel in a New
Realist style (Stevenson, 1999. 'Southern African Art: 1850-1990', catalogue
no. 5 (2): BCI Fine Art).
During this decade, he created a highly regarded series of
portraits of black people. His interest in the problems of representing the
body, which recurs in his work, was later formally investigated by his Doctoral
thesis on how indigenous people were depicted in colonial travel illustration.
Dietrich also exhibited widely, with paintings selected
for every Cape Town Triennial between 1982 and 1991. His work was also included
in the 1985 exhibition 'Tributaries'. The show was widely applauded for
breaking new ground in the presentation of South African art.
In 1987, he was one of five artists representing South
Africa at the Valparaiso Biennial. He was also artist-in-residence at the SANG
during 1989.
Dietrich is passionate about his work. An enquiry about
new projects gets an enthusiastic response. He is busy working on a project
based on photographs and etchings by traveller Dr
Gustav Fritsch made between 1863 and 1866. Dietrich recently travelled to
Germany to source hundreds of these images.
Dietrich’s current work ,
Fourteen
Stations of the Cross is an artist's book of 14 sections informed by the
colonial mission enterprise along the mission route between Griquastad
and Kolobeng (Livingstone's mission station in
Botswana) that will be exhibited at Fried Contemporary Art Gallery in Pretoria
from 1 December 2007 to 2 February 2008.
EDUCATION
1968: Matriculated at Roosevelt High School, Johannesburg
1974: Completed BA in Visual Art at the University of Stellenbosch
1977: Completed two years of postgraduate study in painting at the
Nationale Hoger
Instituut voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp, Belgium
1983: Completed MA in Fine Arts (cum laude), Unisa. Title of dissertation:
The
ordinary and mysterious painted image
1993: Completed D Litt
et Phil in History of Art,
Unisa. Title of thesis: Of salvation and civilisation:
The image of aboriginal southern Africans in travel illustration from the
sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
1975: Designer, National Magazines, Cape Town
1975: Freelance designer for HAUM
1978-80: Lecturer, Department of Fine Arts, University of Pretoria
1981-88: Lecturer, Department of History of Art and Fine Arts, Unisa
1989-94: Senior lecturer, Department of History of Art and Fine Arts, Unisa
1994-97: Co-ordinator of Fine Arts, Unisa
1995-97: Associate Professor, Department of History of Art and Fine Arts, Unisa
1996-97: Acting Head, Department of History of Art and Fine Arts, Unisa
1997: Art consultant and full-time artist
1996: Senior Lecturer, Stellenbosch University
2001: Associate Professor, Stellenbosch University
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
1983: Guest Artist, University Gallery, University of
Stellenbosch
1983: Guest Artist, Tatham Gallery, Pietermaritzburg
1983: Ivan Solomon Gallery, Pretoria
Technikon
1983: Guest Artist, University Gallery, University of Stellenbosch
1986: Guest Artist, SA Association of Arts, Cape Town
1988: With Johannes Maswanganyi, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
1990: With Leon De Bliquy, Laverington
Hall, Cape Town
1991: With Johannes Segogela, Goodman Gallery,
Johannesburg
1992:With Guy du Toit, Stegman Gallery, University of
the Free State, Bloemfontein
1995: With Elfriede Pretorius, Centurion Art Gallery, Centurion
1997:Artist-in-residence, Standard Bank National Arts Festival, Albany Museum,
Grahamstown
1998: Guest artist, South African National Gallery, Cape Town
1998: Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg
1999: Artist-in-residence, MTN, Sandton
2000: Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
2001: Open Window Art Gallery, Pretoria
2003: Stellenbosch University Gallery
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
1977-1997: Participated in over sixty group exhibitions in
Belgium, Botswana, Chile, Egypt, Germany, Italy, Namibia, the Netherlands,
Sweden, the United Kingdom and South Africa. These include the following: 1976:
International Exhibition of Book Design, Munich, Germany
1977: 'Klub van XII',
Koninklike Akademie
voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp, Belgium
1979: 'UP Art Lecturers', South African Association of Arts, Pretoria
1979: 'UP Art Lecturers', University Gallery, Potchefstroom University for
Christian Higher Education
1979: 'UP Art Lecturers', South African Association of Arts, Windhoek
1982: 'Art toward social development: an exhibition of South African
art', National Museum and Art Gallery, Gaborone, Botswana
1982: 'Cape Town Triennial', South African National Gallery (national tour)
1983: 'Contemporary South African Realists', Pretoria Art Museum (national
tour)
1985: 'Cape Town Triennial', South African National Gallery (national tour)
1985: 'BMW Tributaries', Africana Museum in progress, Johannesburg
1986: 'BMW Tributaries', BMW Art Gallery, Munich, Germany
1986: 'Unisa Art Lecturers', Pretoria Art Museum
1986: 'Four Unisa Lecturers',
Stegman Gallery,
University of the Free State, Bloemfontein
1987: 'VIII Biennial of Art', Valparaiso, Chile
1987: Market Gallery Advisory Board Show, Market Gallery, Johannesburg
1988: 'Cape Town Triennial' (merit award), South African National Gallery
(national tour)
1988: 'Detainees' Parents Support Exhibition', Market Gallery, Johannesburg
1989: 'Vita Awards', Johannesburg Art Gallery
1990: 'Looking at Faith; Looking at Art', Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
1991: 'Cape Town Triennial', South African National Gallery (national tour)
1992: 'Vita Awards', Johannesburg Art Gallery
1993: 'Incroci del
Sud',
XLV Venice Biennial, Venice, Italy
1993: 'Affinities', Sala 1, Rome, Italy
1993: 'Southern Cross',
Stedelike Museum, Amsterdam,
the Netherlands
1994: 'Contemporary art from South Africa', Deutsche Aerospace,
Ottobrunn, Germany
1995: 'The Union Buildings Revisited', ABSA Gallery, Johannesburg (Africus 1st Johannesburg Biennale)
1995: Kempton Park/
Thembisa Fine Arts Award
exhibition (First prize), Kempton Park
1996: 'Groundswell', Mermaid Theatre Gallery, London, UK
1996: 'VI Cairo Biennale', Cairo, Egypt
1996: 'North goes South', Civic Gallery, Johannesburg
1997: 'Lifetimes',
Aktionsforum, Praterinsel,
Munich, Germany
1997: 'Contemporary South African Art 1985-1995' from the South African
National Gallery Permanent Collection, SANG, Cape Town
1998: 'The art of observation', Open Window Gallery, Pretoria
1999: 'Emergence', Standard Bank National Arts Festival,
Grahamstown
2000: 'Works on paper' (curated by Peter
Schźtz),
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
2000: 'Stained Paper: South African images in
watercolour',
Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg
2000: 'Stained Paper: South African images in
watercolour',
Albany Museum, Grahamstown
2000: 'Structures and scarifications', Gallery on the Square, Sandton
2000: 'That was the
millenium that was', Goodman
Gallery, Johannesburg
2001: 'Head North: Views from the South African National Gallery's Permanent
Collection', BildMuseet, Umea, Sweden
2001: 'Paas',
Dorp Street
Gallery, Stellenbosch
2001: 'Passages of Time', Sandton Civic Gallery, Sandton
2002: 'Photo Art', University of Stellenbosch Art Museum, Stellenbosch
2002: 'Der
Mond als
Schuh: Zeichnungen der San'
Všlkerkundemuseum, University of Zźrich,
Switzerland
CURATED EXHIBITIONS
1978: 'Media 1978' (Painting Techniques, Equipment and
Materials), Art Gallery, Dept Fine Arts, University of Pretoria
1986: 'Relief Printmaking' (with
Clementina van der
Walt), Market Gallery, Johannesburg
1987: 'Postbox Exhibition' (with Michael Goldberg and Suzette
Munnick), Market Gallery, Johannesburg
1990: 'Unisa Fine Arts student exhibition, University Gallery, Unisa
2000: 'Stained paper: South African images in watercolour'
(With Prof Karin Skawran), Standard Bank Galleries, Johannesburg
PRIZES & SCHOLARSHIPS
1972-74: Won several student awards and bursaries, which
include the Eeufees study grant, the Argus/
Crown Cebestos painting competition, the Boland Bank
Design competition and the Henry Lidchi book prize
1975: Maggie Laubser scholarship for overseas study
1976: Maggie Laubser scholarship for overseas study
1977: Karel
Verlat prize for painting, Antwerp,
Belgium
1982: HSRC grant for MA study
1984: Doctoral Exhibition award, Unisa
1986: HSRC grant for doctoral study
1988: Merit Award winner, Cape Town Triennial
1991: Robin
Aldwinckle award for Doctoral research,
Unisa
1993: Senior travel grant, Unisa
1995: First prize, Kempton Park
Thembisa Fine Arts
Award
1996: Senior travel grant, Unisa
COLLECTIONS
South African National Gallery; Johannesburg Art Gallery;
Pretoria Art Museum; King George VI Gallery; William Humphreys Gallery,
Kimberley; Tatham Art Gallery, Pietermaritzburg;
Durban Art Gallery; Sandton Civic Gallery; Nelspruit Municipal Collection;
Carnegie Gallery, Newcastle; University of South Africa, Pretoria; University
of the Orange Free State, Bloemfontein; University of Stellenbosch; University
of Pretoria; Gertrude Posel Gallery, University of
the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg; Faculty of Dentistry, University of the
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg; Technikon Pretoria;
Gauteng Legislature, Johannesburg; Human Sciences Research Council, Pretoria;
Fedsure Holdings, Johannesburg; SANLAM collection,
Belville; SASOL Collection, Johannesburg; Anglo-American
Corporation, Johannesburg; South African Broadcasting Corporation,
Johannesburg; Head Interiors, Johannesburg; Citibank, Johannesburg; MTN
Collection, Johannesburg; Telkom Collection, Pretoria; Wella
South Africa, Cape Town; Rembrandt Art Foundation, Stellenbosch; South African
Embassy, Bonn, Germany; Daimler-Benz, Stuttgart, Germany; Gibb Architects,
Reading, United Kingdom; First Rand, Johannesburg