logo
At YSP William Kentridge Asks What We Can Trust in Image and Memory

At YSP William Kentridge Asks What We Can Trust in Image and Memory

Forbes01-07-2025
William Kentridge in his studio with Laocoön, Johannesburg, 2021 Stella Olivier for William Kentridge
William Kentridge works with drawing, sculpture, tapestry, film, theatre, opera, and writing—exploring all manner of material, from paper to clay to bronze. His creations move and migrate between media and criss-cross time lucidly. And his multidisciplinary practice has left a distinct mark on contemporary visual culture, reshaping how we think about image, memory, time.
A native of Johannesburg, and the son of prominent anti-apartheid lawyers (his father represented Nelson Mandela), Kentridge's practice is inevitably entangled in the socio-political history of South Africa and the wider world. Yet he rejects the idea of offering fixed truths. Instead, his work constantly questions the grand narratives of history, politics, science, literature, and music—opening up spaces that interrogate the legacies of colonialism and power, and invite multiple ways of seeing.
William Kentridge, Cursive, 2020 Thys Dullaart for William Kentridge
'William Kentridge: The Pull of Gravity' dips into the artist's visionary world. Staged across the indoor gallery and the lawns of Yorkshire Sculpture Park in the north of England, the exhibition features 40 works made between 2007 and 2024. They join a distinguished lineup of sculptures in the park's landscape, including works by Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Elisabeth Frink, and James Turrell.
This is the first museum presentation for Kentridge outside South Africa to focus on his sculptures. He says, 'I never thought of myself as a sculptor, but I had worked a lot with shadows in performance and in drawings and I was interested in the possibility of making something like a shadow—so ephemeral and without any substance—to be solid.'
William Kentridge's Paper Procession (Palermo Cash Book) I (2023) is part of a series of hand‑torn paper cutout miniature silhouettes which inspired the new commissions Thys Dullaart for William Kentridge
At the heart of the exhibition is 'Paper Procession', a new YSP commission featuring six monumental, brightly colored sculptures that appear to be paper thin but are in fact made from painted aluminium panels fixed to steel armatures. They parade human-like outdoors along a century-old yew hedge and are joined in the main YSP park by four of the artist's largest bronzes.
The idea for the new commissions 'derived from anxiety,' he tells me. 'I had to find something for this place and it happened innocently.' Like much of his work, the sculptures evolved intuitively—from flat paper puppets to freestanding forms to these towering outdoor figures.
One of William Kentridge's Paper Procession works at Yorkshire Sculpture Park Nargess Banks
The central YSP gallery features two major video works shown in rotation. 'More Sweetly Play the Dance' (2015) is a hauntingly moving and strangely beautiful silhouetted procession of figures—a brass band, skeletons, refugees—referencing displacement, disease and endurance. 'Oh To Believe in Another World' (2022) takes an even darker, more politically charged turn. Set to Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No.10 (a work long associated with the composer's fraught relationship with Stalin) the film interrogates the tension between artistic freedom and totalitarian control.
In the past, Kentridge has spoken of art's role in giving a sense of agency in the world—for the maker and the viewer. Here music becomes a lens for thinking about the artist as witness, as resister, as someone navigating between public history and private reckoning.
William Kentridge, More Sweetly Play the Dance (2015) at LUMA Foundation, Arles Victor & Simon, Joana Luz for William Kentridge
YSP brings in visitors from all walks of life who come for the art, the beautiful walks and scenery, and for a day out. It also attracts large numbers of school children from nearby cities, many of whom may not have been exposed to art, and certainly not contemporary art.
I ask Kentridge how it feels to be exhibiting here. 'With these sculptures its not like looking at an old master, where we think there's no possible way I could imagine making this. With my sculptures you can see very clearly how things are constructed, how they're put together. And visitors may think: I too can also be an artist.'
William Kentridge, Oh To Believe In Another World (2022), at LUMA Foundation, Arles Vicor & Simon, Joana Luz for William Kentridge
'The Pull of Gravity' is a thoughtful show, with a curatorial approach that highlights Kentridge's constant movement across disciplines. He is also a committed collaborator, and you sense that at YSP—just as you sense the movement of ideas from one exhibition space to the next—often sparked, he says, by a studio member's particular talent or a material's own response to form.
Kentridge speaks of provisional coherence as the concept central to his practice: that meaning, form, even understanding are never fixed and certainly never absolute. Coherence, for him, emerges through process, through these layers and fragments that come together for a moment, only to shift again. It's a kind of order that remains open to change, to revision, and is always shaped by its context.
William Kentridge, Still from Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot, 2022 Kentridge Studio, William Kentridge
To my mind, be it in two or three dimensions, Kentridge's work is always collage. This is how he sees the world, and it is fundamental to how he would like us to view the world since collage requires us to understand the world as fragmented. And it is precisely this that makes Kentridge's work so exciting and so right for our black-and-white, left-or-right, painfully polarizing times.
'Things that seem so clear are clear for a moment,' he tells me when I probe him on the concept, 'and then the clarity disappears and you have to find a different kind of clarity.' This is work that adamantly refuses to instruct or be didactic. Instead, it gestures toward hope, brimming with poeticism, beauty and metaphor.
William Kentridge, Untitled VI (Nose on Horse, Napoleon), 2007 William Kentridge
As an artist in constant engagement with societal concerns, I ask if he has hope in a world that, for many of us, feels increasingly dark and difficult to digest. His face grows serious as he tells me, 'I have both hope and pessimism—both running together. I think to have only one or the other is to blind yourself to part of the world.'
It is this holding of contradictions—beauty and brutality, doubt and belief—that makes Kentridge's work resonate so widely. 'I'm interested in moments of clarity,' he says, 'but ones that don't pretend to last.' And the YSL show invites us to sit inside uncertainty, and to think, to feel, and to keep looking.
'William Kentridge: The Pull of Gravity' is at Yorkshire Sculpture Park from June 28, 2025 to April 19, 2026.
For more on art and design, follow my reviews here .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What's in City Press: TK Molefe's airport tender hijacking
What's in City Press: TK Molefe's airport tender hijacking

News24

time17 hours ago

  • News24

What's in City Press: TK Molefe's airport tender hijacking

Welkom Airport tender war: How TK Molefe 'hijacked' multibillion-rand development project Incarcerated controversial businessman Katiso 'TK' Molefe allegedly orchestrated a multibillion-rand cargo airport development project heist in the Matjhabeng Local Municipality in the Free State using a company registered two days after the tender was advertised in August 2023. Army 'abandons' Oryx helicopters in DRC Five of the military's Oryx helicopters are likely to remain stranded in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), rusting away. National Dialogue will come with a hefty R450m price tag A budget of R450 million has allegedly been earmarked for the National Dialogue, of which R20 million was spent on the first convention held at Unisa this week. Patricia de Lille threatens to dissolve the SA Tourism board Following several allegations of misconduct, which led to the suspension of SA Tourism CEO Nombulelo Guliwe this week, Tourism Minister Patricia de Lille is threatening to dissolve the agency board. Waka Waka millions: Freshlyground demand answers Fifteen years after SA hosted Africa's first Fifa World Cup, popular music group Freshlyground is trying to find out what happened to the millions generated by their hit song Waka Waka with Colombian superstar Shakira. MMC is appointed despite links to 'construction mafia' and Hawks probe The recent appointment of Sithembiso Zungu as MMC for group corporate and shared services in the Johannesburg metro has sparked renewed outrage, given his alleged links to the 'construction mafia'. One in 10 patients contracts infections at Charlotte Maxeke Hospital, Gauteng data reveals Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Hospital is the most dangerous place in Gauteng to contract hospital infections, with one in every 10 patients acquiring a new infection while receiving treatment. Warren Masemola and Nqobile Khumalo spill the tea on power and secrets in Fatal Seduction 2 Seasoned actor Warren Masemola returns to Fatal Seduction as police minister Vilakazi, a man high on power and willing to use it on anyone who crosses his path. Vilakazi, who also owns an underground sex club, harbours ambitions of becoming deputy president, and keeps his innocent wife, Delisiwe, played by Xolile Tshabalala, in the dark. The Voice star's reality: Raising an autistic child in a broken system Her story reflects a national crisis affecting 1.2 million South Africans with autism, who face inadequate education options, crippling costs and a government system lacking the capacity to support them. In mortuaries and laboratories across South Africa, justice hangs in the balance. Nearly 140 000 DNA and toxicology cases are trapped in a crippling forensic pathology backlog that is denying grieving families closure, stalling criminal prosecutions and eroding public confidence in the justice system. WINNING WOMEN | From rural beginnings to award-winning director: Valentino Mathibela's inspiring TV and film journey The TV director says the best way to tell stories is to be true to our languages and culture, to enable us to export our projects. 'I am still the mayor that Tshwane needs', says DA's Brink as mayoral campaign relaunches Despite being removed as Tshwane mayor in a bruising council battle and facing political setbacks, Cilliers Brink insists he is far from finished. US threatens sanctions on countries deploying Cuban doctors The US government plans to revoke the visas of Brazilian, African and Caribbean government officials who allow the Cuban government to send doctors to their countries. SABC denies job cuts as union fights Section 189 letters Despite the SABC denying that it plans to lay off employees in the sales division, the Broadcasting, Electronic Media, and Allied Workers Union (Bemawu) believes the public broadcaster is 'playing hide and seek'. DA attacks ANC economic policies while governing alongside it in the GNU SA's jobs crisis is worsening. The latest Quarterly Labour Force Survey (QLFS) from Stats SA shows unemployment climbing to 33.2% in the second quarter of this year, up from 32.9% earlier this year and 31.9% at the end of last year. What's in City Press Sport Benni McCarthy carves a legacy in East Africa Under the guidance of the Bafana Bafana legendary striker, Kenya are one of the surprise packages at the CAF African Nations Championship. Tim Spirit | Patriotism or desperation: Nigerians pressure Fifa to act over Mokoena controversy Nigeria's media has launched a relentless campaign for Fifa to dock SA three points over Teboho Mokoena's ineligible appearance against Lesotho in the ongoing World Cup qualifiers. Legal challenge threatens NFD season kick-off A pending ruling in the East London High Court in the Eastern Cape could delay the start and throw the PSL's second-tier league, also known as the NFD, into disarray. Watch | The Kind of technical director Safa needs Walter Steenbok, who last held the position, advises the national football governing body on the type of candidate that must succeed him. The tradition-steeped race has in recent years been mired in organisational disputes, but strong indications are that this year's edition is going ahead.

Halala! Sho Madjozi welcomes her first child
Halala! Sho Madjozi welcomes her first child

News24

time2 days ago

  • News24

Halala! Sho Madjozi welcomes her first child

South African celebrities are embracing the trend of keeping pregnancies and engagements under wraps, only sharing the joyous news once their little ones arrive or their vows are exchanged. Sho Madjozi's recent baby announcement is the latest addition to this exclusive club of skipping traditional bump updates and gender reveals. Read more | From white wedding to quiet joy: Ntando Duma and Una Rams stun fans with baby reveal Award-winning artist Sho Madjozi shocked her followers by announcing that she is a mother. Sho has long been celebrated as a cultural symbol and an inspiration, always boldly representing her Xitsonga culture through her vibrant clothing and energetic songs. Her pregnancy news came after she had been on a music and social media hiatus for months, with many speculations of her working on new music. The John Cena hitmaker shared with her 1.3 million followers in a lovely Instagram post that her dream of becoming a mother is now a reality. "Ya'll go ahead and enjoy Friday without me. My dream to become a mother has finally come true," she posted. View this post on Instagram A post shared by It's Sho time 🪩 (@shomadjozi) The news was accompanied by stunning maternity photos. Congratulatory messages have poured in from all around the entertainment industry and her followers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store