Exhibition

Zanele Muholi

Zanele Muholi, Bona, Charlottesville, 2015 800 × 503 mm Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper

Zanele Muholi, Bona, Charlottesville, 2015, 800 × 503 mm, photograph, gelatin silver print on paper © Zanele Muholi, purchased with funds provided by the Africa Acquisitions Committee 2017

Zanele Muholi self-identifies as a visual activist and has been documenting the life of Black LGBTQIA+ communities since the early 2000s in intimate and powerful photographs across South Africa and beyond. From 26 November 2021 to 13 March 2022, the Gropius Bau hosts Muholi’s first major survey in Germany.

Forms of Insistence, Tenderness and Refuge
Public programme accompanying the exhibition Zanele Muholi
To the programme

About the Exhibition

Alongside their earlier, lesser-known series, the show will feature recent works to display the full range of Muholi’s photographic practice, which addresses sexual politics, racial violence, communal resistance and self-assertion. Muholi’s photography is not only a gesture of empowerment, but consistently challenges the heteronormative gaze while building a network of affinity and new pictorial histories. Series such as Faces and Phases and Brave Beauties have contributed to a growing visual archive that celebrates Black queer and trans selfhood, acting as a testimony of those who risk their lives to live authentically in the face of repression and discrimination.

Curated by Natasha Ginwala, Associate Curator, Gropius Bau; Yasufumi Nakamori, Senior Curator International Art (Photography), Tate Modern and Sarah Allen, former Assistant Curator, Tate Modern

Content Guidance
This exhibition contains themes related to gender and sexuality-based discrimination, hate crimes, rape and racism. It also contains sexual images.

Organised by Tate Modern, London in collaboration with Gropius Bau, Berlin; the Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris; Institut Valencià d’Art Modern and Bildmuseet at Umeå UniversityPartners: Wall, Bouvet
Media partners: Monopol, Elephant, NuméroBerlin, Fräulein, BerlinArt Link
Funded by:

and VolkartStiftung